Age-related telomere uncapping is associated with cellular senescence and inflammation independent of telomere shortening in human arteries

RG Morgan, SJ Ives, LA Lesniewski… - American Journal …, 2013 - journals.physiology.org
RG Morgan, SJ Ives, LA Lesniewski, RM Cawthon, RHI Andtbacka, RD Noyes…
American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 2013journals.physiology.org
Arterial telomere dysfunction may contribute to chronic arterial inflammation by inducing
cellular senescence and subsequent senescence-associated inflammation. Although
telomere shortening has been associated with arterial aging in humans, age-related
telomere uncapping has not been described in non-cultured human tissues and may have
substantial prognostic value. In skeletal muscle feed arteries from 104 younger, middle-
aged, and older adults, we assessed the potential role of age-related telomere uncapping in …
Arterial telomere dysfunction may contribute to chronic arterial inflammation by inducing cellular senescence and subsequent senescence-associated inflammation. Although telomere shortening has been associated with arterial aging in humans, age-related telomere uncapping has not been described in non-cultured human tissues and may have substantial prognostic value. In skeletal muscle feed arteries from 104 younger, middle-aged, and older adults, we assessed the potential role of age-related telomere uncapping in arterial inflammation. Telomere uncapping, measured by p-histone γ-H2A.X (ser139) localized to telomeres (chromatin immunoprecipitation; ChIP), and telomeric repeat binding factor 2 bound to telomeres (ChIP) was greater in arteries from older adults compared with those from younger adults. There was greater tumor suppressor protein p53 (P53)/cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1A (P21)-induced senescence, measured by P53 bound to P21 gene promoter (ChIP), and greater expression of P21, interleukin 8, and monocyte chemotactic protein 1 mRNA (RT-PCR) in arteries from older adults compared with younger adults. Telomere uncapping was a highly influential covariate for the age-group difference in P53/P21-induced senescence. Despite progressive age-related telomere shortening in human arteries, mean telomere length was not associated with telomere uncapping or P53/P21-induced senescence. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that advancing age is associated with greater telomere uncapping in arteries, which is linked to P53/P21-induced senescence independent of telomere shortening.
American Physiological Society