4.6 Article

Dynamics of telomere shortening in neutrophils and T lymphocytes during ageing and the relationship to skewed X chromosome inactivation patterns

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY
Volume 109, Issue 2, Pages 272-279

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2141.2000.01970.x

Keywords

haemopoiesis; ageing; telomere length; X chromosome inactivation patterns

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Human haemopoiesis undergoes profound changes throughout life, resulting in compromised regenerative capacity of haemopoietic stem cells. It has been suggested that telomere shortening results in senescence of haemopoietic stem cell subsets and may influence the balance between stern cell renewal and proliferation. Telomere length and telomerase activity was measured in whole blood leucocytes, neutrophils and T cells from cord blood and individuals aged from 1 Sitar to 96 years. Rapid telomere shortening [700 base pairs (bp)] was demonstrated in the first year of life, followed by a gradual decline of 31 bp/year. T cells were shown to have longer telomeres than neutrophils (mean difference 372 bp, P = < 0.0011 but demonstrated similar rates of shortening (20 +/- 0.3 bp/year vs. 22 +/- 0.3 bp/year). Telomerase was detectable in T cells but not in neutrophils, suggesting that telomerase is not the rate-limiting step for regulation of telomere length in haemopoietic cells. Stem cell utilization as measured by It chromosome inactivation patterns was found to be independent of telomere length. This supports the concept that age-dependent skewed haemopoiesis is the result of random stem cell loss or X-allelic exclusion rather than telomeric senescence. These studies provide insight into the ageing process and a reference point for evaluating replicative stress in individuals of different age groups.

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