1. Decreasing initial telomere length in humans intergenerationally understates age‐associated telomere shortening
- Author
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Marc De Buyzere, Massimo Mangino, Tim De Meyer, Kimberly Batten, Jerry W. Shay, Brody Holohan, Sofie Bekaert, Ernst Rietzschel, Woodring E. Wright, Steven C. Hunt, and Tim D. Spector
- Subjects
Male ,Aging ,Telomerase ,TISSUES ,Offspring ,Inheritance Patterns ,Datasets as Topic ,Gene Expression ,DYSKERATOSIS-CONGENITA ,CHILDREN ,Biology ,telomerase ,Paternal Age ,DISEASE ,Telomere Homeostasis ,POLLUTION ,DESIGN ,telomere length ,medicine ,Humans ,genetics ,Longitudinal Studies ,human ,EXPOSURE ,Telomere Shortening ,Genetics ,Extramural ,aging ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Paternal age ,Original Articles ,Cell Biology ,Telomere ,telomeres ,medicine.disease ,secular trend ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,PATERNAL AGE ,Evolutionary biology ,LONGITUDINAL FINDINGS ,HEART ,Female ,parental effects ,Dyskeratosis congenita - Abstract
Telomere length shortens with aging, and short telomeres have been linked to a wide variety of pathologies. Previous studies suggested a discrepancy in age-associated telomere shortening rate estimated by cross-sectional studies versus the rate measured in longitudinal studies, indicating a potential bias in cross-sectional estimates. Intergenerational changes in initial telomere length, such as that predicted by the previously described effect of a father’s age at birth of his offspring (FAB), could explain the discrepancy in shortening rate measurements. We evaluated whether changes occur in initial telomere length over multiple generations in three large datasets and identified paternal birth year (PBY) as a variable that reconciles the difference between longitudinal and cross-sectional measurements. We also clarify the association between FAB and offspring telomere length, demonstrating that this effect is substantially larger than reported in the past. These results indicate the presence of a downward secular trend in telomere length at birth over generational time with potential public health implications.
- Published
- 2015
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