| Literature DB >> 20520771 |
Eli Puterman1, Jue Lin, Elizabeth Blackburn, Aoife O'Donovan, Nancy Adler, Elissa Epel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic psychological stress is associated with detrimental effects on physical health, and may operate in part through accelerated cell aging, as indexed by shorter telomeres at the ends of chromosomes. However, not all people under stress have distinctly short telomeres, and we examined whether exercise can serve a stress-buffering function. We predicted that chronic stress would be related to short telomere length (TL) in sedentary individuals, whereas in those who exercise, stress would not have measurable effects on telomere shortening. METHODOLOGY AND PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20520771 PMCID: PMC2877102 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0010837
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Descriptives across sample (means and standard deviations).
| Mean | SD | |
|
| 1.55 | .77 |
|
| 45.4 | 64.3 |
|
| 5502.73 | 700.82 |
|
| 61.87 | 6.51 |
|
| 26.57 | 5.41 |
Figure 1Fitted Probability of short telomeres as a function of perceived stress for sedentary and active individuals.
Note. Physical activity categories are based on whether the participant met CDC recommended levels of exercise per week. Perceived stress ratings are based on the Perceived Stress Scale. The interaction effect was significant (p<.05), indicating that the relationship between perceived stress and telomere length was significant in inactive participants only. The Y axis probability presents the probability of categorization into short telomere length (bottom tertile) as a function of perceived stress in inactive (top of figure) versus active (bottom of figure) participants. Probability scores were calculated from the fitted regression equations, assuming mean BMI and education level.
Figure 2Relationship between perceived stress and telomere length as a function of physical activity.
Note. Physical activity categories are based on whether the participant met CDC recommended levels of exercise per week. Perceived stress ratings are based on the Perceived Stress Scale. The relationship between perceived stress and telomere length was significant in sedentary participants only.
Johnson-Neyman significance regions for perceived stress predicting telomere length at values of physical activity minutes.
| Number of minutes of physical activity | Log-odds for perceived stress | SE | Confidence interval (LLCI,ULCI) |
| 0 | 2.31 | .94 | .45,4.17 |
| 10 | 2.04 | .84 | .40,3.68 |
| 21 | 1.76 | .74 | .32,3.22 |
| 32 | 1.50 | .67 | .19,2.80 |
|
|
|
|
|
| 53 | .95 | .62 | −.24, 2.15 |
The Johnson-Neyman technique permits the examination of the log-odds of having short telomeres as a function of perceived stress at different values of physical activity (defined by statistical software). Confidence intervals that do not pass 0 are considered significant. As can be seen in bold, at 42 minutes of vigorous physical activity over 3 days, stress no longer significantly predicted telomere length. SE = standard error; LLCI and ULCI = lower and upper limit 95% confidence intervals, respectively.