Photo by NHGRI.
Everyone agrees that good health is vital.However, not everyone agrees on how to achieve good health.
There are a lot of ideas on how to be healthy and how to postpone the ravages of aging.
Similarly, there are a lot of ideas about what biological factors are correlated with healthy aging.
Since the mid 1970s, scientists have isolated a genetic feature called telomores and argue that their length is correlated with health and longevity.
I don't believe there is one single genetic factor that humans can manipulate in order to ward off all aspects of aging. However, telomere length is viewed by many as the chief marker for longevity and health.
I'm looking more closely at telomeres length as just one out of eighteen important biomarkers of health and longevity. But I do concede that it's an important one, in part because it's one of the newer biomarkers on the list. We still have a lot to learn.
This post is part of a series on biomarkers of health and longevity.
What are telomeres?
Telomeres are caps located at the ends of chromosomes--as illustrated in the diagram above.
Specific patterns of DNA sequencing that occur at the ends of the chromosomes help secure the code from unraveling or from connecting to neighboring chromosomes.
When we are born, we have a lot of these sequences to protect the chromosomes structure. As we age--or more specifically each time cells divide--these caps or tips shorten, weakening the chromosome and making it more easily susceptible to damage.
See this link at Your Genome for a longer discussion of telomere length that is more detailed without being too technical.
Correlations
By reading through a half dozen popular articles and scholarly articles on telomere length, researchers are finding a correlation between smoking, stress, inactivity, and the shortening of telomeres length. Some cancers are more prevalent among those with shorter telomeres.
Because scientists have seen a correlation between telomere length and health, more studies are underway that are doing more than measuring the correlation. Here is a 2010 scientific journal article that summarizes an array of telomere research published chiefly in the first decade of the 21st Century.
Today, many are exploring methods for lengthening the telomeres.
Start the video above at the 4 minute mark for a discussion of telomeres length as a biomarker of health and longevity.
Too Good to Be True?
Others find the correlation between telomere length and longevity to be just slightly more common "than a coin flip." US News and World Report, summarizing an academic journal, notes that chronological age and self-reported health were cheaper and easier than measuring telomeres length.
So is this biomarker going to fall out of favor in the same way that reading the life line on one's palm has fallen out of favor? Genetic research probably holds more information than skin wrinkles, a single marker for longevity will probably never materialize--given the complexity of the human body and how many variables exist for how biology interacts with behavior, psychology and the environment.
Related
Biomarkers of Longevity and Health