4.3 Article

Telomere length is independently associated with age, oxidative biomarkers, and sport training in skeletal muscle of healthy adult males

Journal

FREE RADICAL RESEARCH
Volume 52, Issue 6, Pages 639-647

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10715762.2018.1459043

Keywords

Telomere length; semitendinosus muscle; redox biomarkers; heat shock proteins; exercise training

Funding

  1. MIUR PRIN [2012N8YJC3]
  2. University of Rome ForoItalico

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In skeletal muscle, which mainly contains postmitotic myonuclei, it has been suggested that telomere length remains roughly constant throughout adult life, or shortens in response to physiopathological conditions in muscle diseases or in the elderly. However, telomere length results from both the replicative history of a specific tissue and the exposure to environmental, DNA damage-related factors, therefore the predictive biological significance of telomere measures should combine the analysis of the various interactive factors. In the present study, we analysed any relationship between telomere length [mean and minimum terminal restriction fragment (TRF) length] chronological age, oxidative damage (4-HNE, protein carbonyls), catalase activity, and heat shock proteins expression (alpha B-crystallin, Hsp27, Hsp90) in semitendinous muscle biopsies of 26 healthy adult males between 20 and 50 years of age, also exploring the influence of regular exercise participation. The multiple linear regression analysis identified age, 4-HNE, catalase, and training status as significant independent variables associated with telomere length and jointly accounting for similar to 30-36% of interindividual variation in mean and/or minimum TRF length. No association has been identified between telomere length and protein carbonyl, alpha B-crystallin, Hsp27, and Hsp90, as well as between age and the variables related to stress response. Our results showed that skeletal muscle from healthy adults displays an age-dependent telomere attrition and that oxidised environment plays an age-independent contribution, partially influenced by exercise training.

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