| Literature DB >> 28410238 |
Nicole C Arsenis1, Tongjian You2, Elisa F Ogawa2, Grant M Tinsley3, Li Zuo4.
Abstract
Telomeres protect the integrity of information-carrying DNA by serving as caps on the terminal portions of chromosomes. Telomere length decreases with aging, and this contributes to cell senescence. Recent evidence supports that telomere length of leukocytes and skeletal muscle cells may be positively associated with healthy living and inversely correlated with the risk of several age-related diseases, including cancer, cardiovascular disease, obesity, diabetes, chronic pain, and stress. In observational studies, higher levels of physical activity or exercise are related to longer telomere lengths in various populations, and athletes tend to have longer telomere lengths than non-athletes. This relationship is particularly evident in older individuals, suggesting a role of physical activity in combating the typical age-induced decrements in telomere length. To date, a small number of exercise interventions have been executed to examine the potential influence of chronic exercise on telomere length, but these studies have not fully established such relationship. Several potential mechanisms through which physical activity or exercise could affect telomere length are discussed, including changes in telomerase activity, oxidative stress, inflammation, and decreased skeletal muscle satellite cell content. Future research is needed to mechanistically examine the effects of various modalities of exercise on telomere length in middle-aged and older adults, as well as in specific clinical populations.Entities:
Keywords: exercise; leukocyte; muscle; physical activity; telomere length
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28410238 PMCID: PMC5546536 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.16726
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Effects of physical activity/exercise on skeletal muscle telomere length: observational studies
| Study, Year | Participants | Physical Activity/Exercise Type | Influence on Telomere Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kadi et al., 2008 | 14 healthy adults (7 non-lifters, 7 power lifters) | Power lifting; 8±3 years | Longer skeletal muscle telomere length in power lifters |
| Rae et al., 2010 | 37 adults (19 sedentary subjects, 18 endurance runners) | Endurance running; 40 km/week, ≥7 years | Same skeletal muscle telomere length in runners |
| Osthus et al., 2012 | 20 young and older men (10 medium activity level, 10 endurance athletes) | Endurance exercise (long distance skiing & track running competitions); Medium activity (moderately physically active) | Longer skeletal muscle telomere length in older athletes |
Effects of physical activity/exercise on leukocyte telomere length: observational studies
| Study, Year | Participants | Physical Activity/Exercise Type | Influence on Telomere Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cherkas et al., 2008 | 2401 white twin adults | Self-reported physical activity (4 groups based on physical activity levels) | Longer leukocyte telomere length with increasing physical activity level. |
| Ludlow et al., 2008 | 69 adults | Various aerobic exercise (divided into quartiles based on exercise energy | Longer leukocyte telomere length in 2nd quartile |
| Werner et al., 2009 | 58 young and 46 older adults (47 healthy non-athletes, 57 middle and long-distance runners) | Young athletes: 73±4.8 km/wk | Longer leukocyte telomere length, higher telomere-stabilizing proteins, lower telomere erosion in athletes |
| LaRocca et al., 2010 | 25 healthy young and 32 older adults (30 sedentary subjects, 27 endurance exercisers) | Vigorous aerobic exercise ≥5 days/week, >45 min/day, ≥5 years | Same leukocyte telomere length in older athletes |
| Song et al., 2010 | 80 healthy adults | Self-reported physical activity | Self-reported physical activity was not associated with leukocyte telomere length, but was associated with accumulation of DNA damage. |
| Krauss et al., 2011 | 944 adults with stable coronary heart disease | Self-reported physical activity | Self-reported physical activity was associated with shorter telomere length, but not after multivariate adjustment |
| Du et al., 2012 | 7,813 adult women | Eight possible physical activities, usual walking pace, and the number of flights of stairs climbed daily. | Calisthenics/aerobics-associated increase in leukocyte telomere length (0.10-SD) was observed when comparing the most to the least active women. |
| Kim et al., 2012 | 44 healthy postmenopausal women (21 sedentary subjects, 23 habitual exercise participants) | Aerobic and resistance exercise for 60+ minutes, > 3 times per week, for > 12 months | Longer leukocyte telomere length in exercise participants |
| Denham et al., 2013 | 123 males (56 healthy non-marathon runners, 67 ultra-marathon runners) | Ultra-marathon running, average distance 40-100 km/week, ≥2 years | Longer leukocyte telomere length in runners |
| Mathur et al., 2013 | 32 middle-aged adults (15 healthy sedentary subjects, 17 marathon runners) | Marathon running, 32±9 miles/week, 14±11 years | Same leukocyte telomere length in runners |
| Borghini et al. | 62 adults (20 athletes, 42 sedentary controls) | Endurance training | Longer salivary telomere length in endurance athletes |
| Loprinzi et al | 6503 adults | Movement-based behaviors (moderate-intensity and vigorous intensity physical activity, walking/cycling for transportation, and muscle-strengthening activities) | A clear dose-response relation was observed between movement-based behaviors and leukocyte telomere length. |
| Soares-Miranda et al | 582 older adults | Self-reported physical activity | Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses showed no significant associations between physical activity and leukocyte telomere length |
| Saßenroth et al | 815 older adults | Self-reported physical activity | Physical activity was positively associated with leukocyte telomere length. Practicing a sport for > 10 years associated with longer telomeres. |
| Silva et al | 46 older adults (15 intensively trained, 16 moderately trained, 15 untrained) | Intensive training: training ≥ 5 days/week (>50 km/week); moderate training: playing volleyball, basketball, or running less than 6 km, 2-3 days/week | Longer leukocyte telomere length in trained |
| Latifovic et al | 477 healthy adults | Self-reported physical activity | More vigorous physical activity was associated with longer leukocyte telomere length. |
| Loprinzi et al 2016 | 6474 adults | Self-reported physical activity | Meeting physical activity guidelines for running, but not other modes, was associated with longer leukocyte telomere length. |
| Kanel et al 2016 | 203 African and Caucasian school teachers | Objectively measured physical activity | Habitual physical activity was not associated with leukocyte telomere length. |
Effects of exercise training on leukocyte telomere length: interventional studies
| Study, year | Participants | Intervention | Effects on telomere length |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shin et al., 2008 | 16 obese, middle-aged women | No exercise control | Same leukocyte telomere length in aerobic exercise |
| Mason et al., 2013 | 439 overweight, obese, older adult (87 control, 188 dietary weight loss, 117 aerobic exercise, 117 diet & exercise) | No exercise control | Same leukocyte telomere length in aerobic exercise versus control. |
| Sjögren et al., 2014 | 49 overweight and abdominally obese older adults | Usual care with minimal intervention control | Same leukocyte telomere length in exercise intervention |
Figure 1Schematic demonstrating the potential effects of physical activity and exercise on telomere length
Abbreviations: TRF2 (telomeric repeat-binding factor 2); ROS (reactive oxygen species); WBC (white blood cell); HSC (haematopoietic stem cell); IL (interleukin); TNF-α (tumor necrosis factor-α).