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Body mass index is negatively associated with telomere length: a collaborative cross-sectional meta-analysis of 87 observational studies

Authors :
Gielen, Marij
Gielen, Marij
Hageman, Geja J.
Antoniou, Evangelia E.
Nordfjall, Katarina
Mangino, Massimo
Balasubramanyam, Muthuswamy
de Meyer, Tim
Hendricks, Audrey E.
Giltay, Erik J.
Hunt, Steven C.
Nettleton, Jennifer A.
Salpea, Klelia D.
Diaz, Vanessa A.
Farzaneh-Far, Ramin
Atzmon, Gil
Harris, Sarah E.
Hou, Lifang
Gilley, David
Hovatta, Iiris
Kark, Jeremy D.
Nassar, Hisham
Kurz, David J.
Mather, Karen A.
Willeit, Peter
Zheng, Yun-Ling
Pavanello, Sofia
Demerath, Ellen W.
Rode, Line
Bunout, Daniel
Steptoe, Andrew
Boardman, Lisa
Marti, Amelia
Needham, Belinda
Zheng, Wei
Ramsey-Goldman, Rosalind
Pellatt, Andrew J.
Kaprio, Jaakko
Hofmann, Jonathan N.
Gieger, Christian
Paolisso, Giuseppe
Hjelmborg, Jacob B. H.
Mirabello, Lisa
Seeman, Teresa
Wong, Jason
van der Harst, Pim
Broer, Linda
Kronenberg, Florian
Kollerits, Barbara
Strandberg, Timo
Eisenberg, Dan TA
Duggan, Catherine
Verhoeven, Josine E.
Schaakxs, Roxanne
Zannolli, Raffaela
dos Reis, Rosana MR
Charchar, Fadi J.
Tomaszewski, Maciej
Mons, U.
Demuth, Ilja
Iglesias Molli, Andrea Elena
Cheng, Guo
Krasnienkov, Dmytro
D'Antono, Bianca
Kasielski, Marek
McDonnell, Barry J
Ebstein, Richard P.
Sundquist, Kristina
Zeegers, Maurice P.
TELOMAAS Group
Gielen, Marij
Gielen, Marij
Hageman, Geja J.
Antoniou, Evangelia E.
Nordfjall, Katarina
Mangino, Massimo
Balasubramanyam, Muthuswamy
de Meyer, Tim
Hendricks, Audrey E.
Giltay, Erik J.
Hunt, Steven C.
Nettleton, Jennifer A.
Salpea, Klelia D.
Diaz, Vanessa A.
Farzaneh-Far, Ramin
Atzmon, Gil
Harris, Sarah E.
Hou, Lifang
Gilley, David
Hovatta, Iiris
Kark, Jeremy D.
Nassar, Hisham
Kurz, David J.
Mather, Karen A.
Willeit, Peter
Zheng, Yun-Ling
Pavanello, Sofia
Demerath, Ellen W.
Rode, Line
Bunout, Daniel
Steptoe, Andrew
Boardman, Lisa
Marti, Amelia
Needham, Belinda
Zheng, Wei
Ramsey-Goldman, Rosalind
Pellatt, Andrew J.
Kaprio, Jaakko
Hofmann, Jonathan N.
Gieger, Christian
Paolisso, Giuseppe
Hjelmborg, Jacob B. H.
Mirabello, Lisa
Seeman, Teresa
Wong, Jason
van der Harst, Pim
Broer, Linda
Kronenberg, Florian
Kollerits, Barbara
Strandberg, Timo
Eisenberg, Dan TA
Duggan, Catherine
Verhoeven, Josine E.
Schaakxs, Roxanne
Zannolli, Raffaela
dos Reis, Rosana MR
Charchar, Fadi J.
Tomaszewski, Maciej
Mons, U.
Demuth, Ilja
Iglesias Molli, Andrea Elena
Cheng, Guo
Krasnienkov, Dmytro
D'Antono, Bianca
Kasielski, Marek
McDonnell, Barry J
Ebstein, Richard P.
Sundquist, Kristina
Zeegers, Maurice P.
TELOMAAS Group
Source :
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition vol.108 (2018) nr.3 p.453-475 [ISSN 0002-9165]
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: Even before the onset of age-related diseases, obesity might be a contributing factor to the cumulative burden of oxidative stress and chronic inflammation throughout the life course. Obesity may therefore contribute to accelerated shortening of telomeres. Consequently, obese persons are more likely to have shorter telomeres, but the association between body mass index (BMI) and leukocyte telomere length (TL) might differ across the life span and between ethnicities and sexes.Objective: A collaborative cross-sectionalmeta-analysis of observational studies was conducted to investigate the associations between BMI and TL across the life span.Design: Eighty-seven distinct study samples were included in the meta-analysis capturing data from 146,114 individuals. Study-specific age-and sex-adjusted regression coefficients were combined by using a random-effects model in which absolute [base pairs (bp)] and relative telomere to single-copy gene ratio (T/S ratio) TLs were regressed against BMI. Stratified analysis was performed by 3 age categories ("young": 18-60 y; "middle": 61-75 y; and "old": > 75 y), sex, and ethnicity.Results: Each unit increase in BMI corresponded to a-3.99 bp (95% CI: -5.17, -2.81 bp) difference in TL in the total pooled sample; among young adults, each unit increase in BMI corresponded to a -7.67 bp (95% CI:-10.03,-5.31 bp) difference. Each unit increase in BMI corresponded to a -1.58 x 10(-3) unit T/S ratio (0.16% decrease; 95% CI: -2.14 x 10(-3), -1.01 x 10(-3)) difference in ageand sex-adjusted relative TL in the total pooled sample; among young adults, each unit increase in BMI corresponded to a -2.58 x 10(-3) unit T/S ratio (0.26% decrease; 95% CI: -3.92 x 10(-3), -1.25 x 10(-3)). The associations were predominantly for the white pooled population. No sex differences were observed.Conclusions: A higher BMI is associated with shorter telomeres, especially in younger individuals. The presently observe

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition vol.108 (2018) nr.3 p.453-475 [ISSN 0002-9165]
Notes :
DOI: 10.1093/ajcn/nqy107, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1304821438
Document Type :
Electronic Resource