scholarly journals Telomere shortening is associated with corticosterone stress response in adult barn swallows

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandra Costanzo ◽  
Roberto Ambrosini ◽  
Marco Parolini ◽  
Manuela Caprioli ◽  
Simona Secomandi ◽  
...  

Abstract When vertebrates face stressful events, the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis is activated, generating a rapid increase in circulating glucocorticoid (GC) stress hormones followed by a return to baseline levels. However, repeated activation of HPA axis may lead to increase in oxidative stress. One target of oxidative stress is telomeres, nucleoprotein complexes at the end of chromosomes that shorten at each cell division. The susceptibility of telomeres to oxidizing molecules has led to the hypothesis that increased GC levels boost telomere shortening, but studies on this link are scanty. We studied if, in barn swallows Hirundo rustica, changes in adult erythrocyte telomere length between 2 consecutive breeding seasons are related to corticosterone (CORT) (the main avian GC) stress response induced by a standard capture-restraint protocol. Within-individual telomere length did not significantly change between consecutive breeding seasons. Second-year individuals showed the highest increase in circulating CORT concentrations following restraint. Moreover, we found a decline in female stress response along the breeding season. In addition, telomere shortening covaried with the stress response: a delayed activation of the negative feedback loop terminating the stress response was associated with greater telomere attrition. Hence, among-individual variation in stress response may affect telomere dynamics.

2016 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 350-358 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amparo Escribano ◽  
Sara Pastor ◽  
Ana Reula ◽  
Silvia Castillo ◽  
Silvia Vicente ◽  
...  

Numerous studies have shown that oxidative stress accelerates telomere shortening in several lung pathologies. Since oxidative stress is involved in the pathophysiology of α1-antitrypsin deficiency (AATD), we hypothesised that telomere shortening would be accelerated in AATD patients. This study aimed to assess telomere length in AATD patients and to study its association with α1-antitrypsin phenotypes.Telomere length, telomerase activity, telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) expression and biomarkers of oxidative stress were measured in 62 children and teenagers (aged 2–18 years) diagnosed with AATD and 18 controls (aged 3–16 years).Our results show that intermediate-risk (MZ; SZ) and high-risk (ZZ) AATD patients have significantly shorter telomeres and increased oxidative stress than controls. Correlation studies indicate that telomere length was related to oxidative stress markers in AATD patients. Multiple hypothesis testing revealed an association between telomere length, telomerase activity, hTERT expression and AATD phenotypes; high-risk patients showed shorter telomeres, lower hTERT expression and decreased telomerase activity than intermediate-risk and low-risk patients.AATD patients show evidence of increased oxidative stress leading to telomere attrition. An association between telomere and α1-antitrypsin phenotypes is observed suggesting that telomere length could be a promising biomarker for AATD disease progression.


Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 1423
Author(s):  
Pedro A. Pousa ◽  
Raquel M. Souza ◽  
Paulo Henrique M. Melo ◽  
Bernardo H. M. Correa ◽  
Tamires S. C. Mendonça ◽  
...  

Telomeres are aging biomarkers, as they shorten while cells undergo mitosis. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether psychiatric disorders marked by psychological distress lead to alterations to telomere length (TL), corroborating the hypothesis that mental disorders might have a deeper impact on our physiology and aging than it was previously thought. A systematic search of the literature using MeSH descriptors of psychological distress (“Traumatic Stress Disorder” or “Anxiety Disorder” or “depression”) and telomere length (“cellular senescence”, “oxidative stress” and “telomere”) was conducted on PubMed, Cochrane Library and ScienceDirect databases. A total of 56 studies (113,699 patients) measured the TL from individuals diagnosed with anxiety, depression and posttraumatic disorders and compared them with those from healthy subjects. Overall, TL negatively associates with distress-related mental disorders. The possible underlying molecular mechanisms that underly psychiatric diseases to telomere shortening include oxidative stress, inflammation and mitochondrial dysfunction linking. It is still unclear whether psychological distress is either a cause or a consequence of telomere shortening.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 2669 ◽  
Author(s):  
Máximo Bernabeu-Wittel ◽  
Raquel Gómez-Díaz ◽  
Álvaro González-Molina ◽  
Sofía Vidal-Serrano ◽  
Jesús Díez-Manglano ◽  
...  

Background: The presence of oxidative stress, telomere shortening, and apoptosis in polypathological patients (PP) with sarcopenia and frailty remains unknown. Methods: Multicentric prospective observational study in order to assess oxidative stress markers (catalase, glutathione reductase (GR), total antioxidant capacity to reactive oxygen species (TAC-ROS), and superoxide dismutase (SOD)), absolute telomere length (aTL), and apoptosis (DNA fragmentation) in peripheral blood samples of a hospital-based population of PP. Associations of these biomarkers to sarcopenia, frailty, functional status, and 12-month mortality were analyzed. Results: Of the 444 recruited patients, 97 (21.8%), 278 (62.6%), and 80 (18%) were sarcopenic, frail, or both, respectively. Oxidative stress markers (lower TAC-ROS and higher SOD) were significantly enhanced and aTL significantly shortened in patients with sarcopenia, frailty or both syndromes. No evidence of apoptosis was detected in blood leukocytes of any of the patients. Both oxidative stress markers (GR, p = 0.04) and telomere shortening (p = 0.001) were associated to death risk and to less survival days. Conclusions: Oxidative stress markers and telomere length were enhanced and shortened, respectively, in blood samples of polypathological patients with sarcopenia and/or frailty. Both were associated to decreased survival. They could be useful in the clinical practice to assess vulnerable populations with multimorbidity and of potential interest as therapeutic targets.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samira Tajbakhsh ◽  
Kamelya Aliakbari ◽  
Damian J. Hussey ◽  
Karen M. Lower ◽  
Anthony J. Donato ◽  
...  

Vascular dysfunction is an early feature of diabetic vascular disease, due to increased oxidative stress and reduced nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability. This can lead to endothelial cell senescence and clinical complications such as stroke. Cells can become senescent by shortened telomeres and oxidative stress is known to accelerate telomere attrition. Sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) has been linked to vascular health by upregulating endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), suppressing oxidative stress, and attenuating telomere shortening. Accelerated leukocyte telomere attrition appears to be a feature of clinical type 2 diabetes (T2D) and therefore the telomere system may be a potential therapeutic target in preventing vascular complications of T2D. However the effect of T2D on vascular telomere length is currently unknown. We hypothesized that T2D gives rise to shortened leukocyte and vascular telomeres alongside reduced vascular SIRT1 expression and increased oxidative stress. Accelerated telomere attrition was observed in circulating leukocytes, but not arteries, in T2D compared to control rats. T2D rats had blunted arterial SIRT1 and eNOS protein expression levels which were associated with reduced antioxidant defense capacity. Our findings suggest that hyperglycemia and a deficit in vascular SIRT1per seare not sufficient to prematurely shorten vascular telomeres.


2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 136-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
David W. Haley ◽  
Jennifer Cordick ◽  
Sarah Mackrell ◽  
Immaculate Antony ◽  
Maireanne Ryan-Harrison

In humans, anticipatory stress involves activation of the limbic–hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis, which releases stress hormones such as cortisol in response to an impending stressor. Conditioning of the stress response to anticipate and prepare for future challenges is a hallmark of adaptation. It is unknown whether human infants in the first year of life have developed the neural circuitry to support the anticipation of stressful events in an attachment context. Here, we show that human infants at six months of age produce an anticipatory stress response, as indicated by the release of stress hormones, when re-exposed after 24 h to a context in which they demonstrated a stress response to a disruption in the parent–infant relationship. Although infant stress response (cortisol elevation) was greater to the stressful event (parent unresponsiveness) than to the second exposure to the stress context (room, chair, presence of parent and experimenter, etc.), it was greater in the stress group than in the control group on both days. Results suggest that human infants have the capacity to produce an anticipatory stress response that is based on expectations about how their parents will treat them in a specific context.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raneem Habib ◽  
Ryong Kim ◽  
Heidemarie Neitzel ◽  
Ilja Demuth ◽  
Krystyna Chrzanowska ◽  
...  

AbstractThe autosomal recessive genetic disorder Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS) is characterized by a defect in DNA double-strand break repair protein nibrin and chromosome instability associated with a high predisposition to cancer. Here we hypothesized that impaired nibrin/MRE11/RAD50 telomere maintenance complex may also affect telomere length and modulate the cancer phenotype.Telomere length was studied in blood from 38 homozygous and 27 heterozygous individuals, in one homozygous fetus, and in sex NBS lymphoblastoid cell lines (all with the founder mutation c.657_661del5), and in three humanized Nbs mice, using qPCR, TRF and Q-FISH.Telomere lengths were markedly but uniformly reduced to 20-40% of healthy controls. There was no correlation between telomere length and severity of clinical phenotype or age of death. By contrast, individual patients with very short telomeres displayed long survival times after cancer manifestation. Mildly accelerated telomere attrition was found in older NBS heterozygotes. In the NBS-fetus, the spinal cord, brain and heart had the longest telomeres, skin the shortest. Humanized Nbs mice (with much longer telo-meres than those in human beings) did not show accelerated telomere attrition.Our data clearly show that NBS is a secondary telomeropathy with unique features. Te- lomere attrition in NBS may cause genetic instability and contribute to the high cancer incidence in NBS. On the other hand, short telomeres may prevent an even worse pheno-type when a tumor has developed. These data may help to understand the high cancer rate in NBS and also the bifunctional role of telomere shortening in cancerogenesis.Author SummaryDNA damage is harmful because it leads to mutations in genes that initiate or accelerate cancerogenesis. The devastating consequences of DNA damage are manifested in diseases with non-functional repair pathways such as Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS). A common feature of these diseases is a high tumor incidence. However, cancer incidence varies and is not clear why it is highest for NBS. In a previous study, we have shown that the underlying nebrin mutation not only leads to defective DNA repair but also to higher degree of oxidative stress that generates further DNA lesions. Nibrin may play also an important role in protecting chromosome ends, the telomeres, from inap-propriate DNA repair. Therefore we examined the telomere length in NBS and show markedly reduced values in affected patients but not in NBC mice (with much milder phenotype and longer telomeres). Telomere attrition contributes to genetic instability and may thus contribute to the high cancer incidence in NBS. Individual patients with very short telomeres, however, displayed long survival times after cancer manifestation. Thus, short telomeres may also prevent an even worse phenotype when a tumor has developed. These data are fundamental to understanding the high cancer rate in NBS and also the bifunctional role of telomere shortening in cancer.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 2230-2230
Author(s):  
Blanche P Alter ◽  
Neelam Giri ◽  
Peter M. Lansdorp ◽  
Gabriela M. Baerlocher ◽  
Philip S Rosenberg ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2230 Dyskeratosis congenita (DC) is an inherited bone marrow failure syndrome with a complex clinical phenotype, including dysplastic nails, lacy reticular pigmentation, and oral leukoplakia (the diagnostic triad). Numerous other physical abnormalities may be present, in addition to cytopenias due to bone marrow failure, and a high risk of leukemia or solid tumors. However, many patients have no physical findings at diagnosis. Patients with DC have very short telomeres, and approximately one-half have a mutation in one of six genes important in telomere biology. Telomere length in leukocyte subsets, measured by automated flow fluorescence in situ hybridization (flow-FISH), is both sensitive and specific for identifying individuals with DC. Telomeres consist of nucleotide repeats and a protein complex at chromosome ends that are critical in chromosomal stability which shorten during normal cell division. Cross-sectional studies of normal individuals suggest that telomere length decreases with age in a sigmoid pattern from birth to old age. In a cross-sectional analysis of 26 patients with DC, we previously observed that telomere length appeared to be stable or even to slightly increase with age (BP Alter et al, Blood 110:149, 2007). Similar results were shown in 23 different DC patients by others (M Bessler et al, FEBS Lett 2010 in press). We speculated that these data were influenced by early presentation (or recognition) of clinically more severe patients, while patients with similar telomere length who were clinically milder were identified at older ages. In this pilot study, we examined, for the first time, the longitudinal age-association of telomere attrition in nine patients with DC who were followed for five to seven years (currently 8 – 50 years of age). These include three patients with mutations in TERC, and two each with TINF2, TERT, and DKC1 mutations. When first studied, four had normal hematopoiesis, three moderate cytopenias, one was receiving androgens, and one was on transfusions. Subsequently, one with normal hematopoiesis developed mild thrombocytopenia, one who was on transfusions responded to androgens, and one with moderate aplastic anemia became severe. In all cases, telomere length decreased with age. In a linear regression model, the average annual decrease in telomere length in lymphocytes was 167 base pairs/year (bp/yr) + 104, similar to the rate in granulocytes, 159 + 92 bp/yr. According to the literature, the rate of telomere attrition in longitudinal studies in normal blood is ∼45-50 bp/yr, albeit by methods other than flow-FISH; the rate of telomere shortening appears to decrease with increasing age. The average patient Z-scores at the beginning of the study were -3.9 standard deviations below the median for age in healthy normal controls, and were -4.3 at the end, consistent with the impression that DC patient telomeres shorten somewhat more than expected from normal aging. These data support the hypothesis that the earlier cross-sectional results for patients with DC indeed were influenced by the cross-sectional rather than longitudinal nature of the data. The current longitudinal data suggest that telomere shortening could possibly be accelerated in patients with DC, but larger studies are required. Our results indicate that patients with DC have telomeres that are much shorter than normal for their age, and that over time they continue to shorten, consistent with DC being classified as a disorder of premature aging. Disclosures: Lansdorp: Repeat Diagnostics: Equity Ownership.


2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 20130340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuela Caprioli ◽  
Maria Romano ◽  
Andrea Romano ◽  
Diego Rubolini ◽  
Rosita Motta ◽  
...  

Telomere length and dynamics are increasingly scrutinized as ultimate determinants of performance, including age-dependent mortality and fecundity. Few studies have investigated longevity in relation to telomere length (TL) in the wild and none has analysed longevity in relation to TL soon after hatching, despite the fact that telomere shortening may mostly occur early in life. We show that TL in nestling barn swallows ( Hirundo rustica ) in the wild does not predict longevity. However, TL positively covaries with body size, suggesting that individuals with large TL can afford to grow larger without paying the cost of reduced TL, and/or that benign rearing conditions ensure both large body size and low rates of telomere shortening. Overall, our study hints at a role of TL in developmental processes, but also indicates a need for further analyses to assess the expectation that TL in young individuals predicts longevity in the wild.


2016 ◽  
Vol 283 (1836) ◽  
pp. 20161184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Asghar ◽  
Vaidas Palinauskas ◽  
Nadège Zaghdoudi-Allan ◽  
Gediminas Valkiūnas ◽  
Andrey Mukhin ◽  
...  

Several studies have shown associations between shorter telomere length in blood and weakened immune function, susceptibility to infections, and increased risk of morbidity and mortality. Recently, we have shown that malaria accelerates telomere attrition in blood cells and shortens lifespan in birds. However, the impact of infections on telomere attrition in different body tissues within an individual is unknown. Here, we tested whether malarial infection leads to parallel telomere shortening in blood and tissue samples from different organs. We experimentally infected siskins ( Spinus spinus ) with the avian malaria parasite Plasmodium ashfordi , and used real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to measure telomere length in control and experimentally infected siskins. We found that experimentally infected birds showed faster telomere attrition in blood over the course of infection compared with control individuals (repeatedly measured over 105 days post-infection (DPI)). Shorter telomeres were also found in the tissue of all six major organs investigated (liver, lungs, spleen, heart, kidney, and brain) in infected birds compared with controls at 105 DPI. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study showing that an infectious disease results in synchronous telomere shortening in the blood and tissue cells of internal organs within individuals, implying that the infection induces systemic stress. Our results have far-reaching implications for understanding how the short-term effects of an infection can translate into long-term costs, such as organ dysfunction, degenerative diseases, and ageing.


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