Lifestyle impacts on the aging‐associated expression of biomarkers of DNA damage and telomere dysfunction in human blood

Summary Cellular aging is characterized by telomere shortening, which can lead to uncapping of chromosome ends (telomere dysfunction) and activation of DNA damage responses. There is some evidence that DNA damage accumulates during human aging and that lifestyle factors contribute to the accumulatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Aging cell 2010-08, Vol.9 (4), p.607-615
Hauptverfasser: Song, Zhangfa, Von Figura, Guido, Liu, Yan, Kraus, Johann M., Torrice, Chad, Dillon, Patric, Rudolph‐Watabe, Masami, Ju, Zhenyu, Kestler, Hans A., Sanoff, Hanna, Lenhard Rudolph, Karl
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Summary Cellular aging is characterized by telomere shortening, which can lead to uncapping of chromosome ends (telomere dysfunction) and activation of DNA damage responses. There is some evidence that DNA damage accumulates during human aging and that lifestyle factors contribute to the accumulation of DNA damage. Recent studies have identified a set of serum markers that are induced by telomere dysfunction and DNA damage, and these markers showed an increased expression in blood during human aging. Here, we investigated the influence of lifestyle factors (such as exercise, smoking, body mass) on the aging‐associated expression of serum markers of DNA damage (CRAMP, EF‐1α, stathmin, n‐acetyl‐glucosaminidase and chitinase) in comparison with other described markers of cellular aging (p16INK4a upregulation and telomere shortening) in human peripheral blood. The study shows that lifestyle factors have an age‐independent impact on the expression level of biomarkers of DNA damage. Smoking and increased body mass indices were associated with elevated levels of biomarkers of DNA damage independent of the age of the individuals. In contrast, exercise was associated with an age‐independent reduction in the expression of biomarkers of DNA damage in human blood. The expression of biomarkers of DNA damage correlated positively with p16INK4a expression and negatively with telomere length in peripheral blood T‐lymphocytes. Together, these data provide experimental evidence that both aging and lifestyle impact on the accumulation of DNA damage during human aging.
ISSN:1474-9718
1474-9726
DOI:10.1111/j.1474-9726.2010.00583.x