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Accelerated Telomere Attrition Is Associated with Relative Household Income, Diet and Inflammation in the pSoBid Cohort

Paul G. Shiels, Liane M. McGlynn, Alan MacIntyre, P. Johnson, G. David Batty, Harry Burns, Jonathan Cavanagh, Kevin A. Deans, Ian Ford, Alex McConnachie, Agnes McGinty, Jennifer McLean, Keith Millar, Naveed Sattar, Carol Tannahill

PLoS ONE · 2011 · ▲ 144 citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: It has previously been hypothesized that lower socio-economic status can accelerate biological ageing, and predispose to early onset of disease. This study investigated the association of socio-economic and lifestyle factors, as well as traditional and novel risk factors, with biological-ageing, as measured by telomere(definition) length, in a Glasgow based cohort that included individuals with extreme socio-economic differences. METHODS: A total of 382 blood samples from the pSoBid study were available for telomere analysis. For each participant, data was available for socio-economic status factors, biochemical parameters and dietary intake. Statistical analyses were undertaken to investigate the association between telomere lengths and these aforementioned parameters. RESULTS: The rate of age-related telomere attrition was significantly associated with low relative income, housing tenure and poor diet. Notably, telomere length was positively associated with LDL and total cholesterol levels, but inversely correlated to circulating IL-6. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest lower socio-economic status and poor diet are relevant to accelerated biological ageing. They also suggest potential associations between elevated circulating IL-6, a measure known to predict cardiovascular disease and diabetes with biological ageing. These observations require further study to tease out potential mechanistic links.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0022521
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2026-06-09 MST

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APA
Shiels, P.G., McGlynn, L.M., MacIntyre, A., Johnson, P., Batty, G.D., Burns, H., Cavanagh, J., Deans, K.A., Ford, I., McConnachie, A., McGinty, A., McLean, J., Millar, K., Sattar, N., Tannahill, C., Velupillai, Y.N., &amp; Packard, C.J. (2011). Accelerated Telomere Attrition Is Associated with Relative Household Income, Diet and Inflammation in the pSoBid Cohort. <em>PLoS ONE</em>. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0022521
Vancouver
Shiels PG, McGlynn LM, MacIntyre A, Johnson P, Batty GD, Burns H, et al. Accelerated Telomere Attrition Is Associated with Relative Household Income, Diet and Inflammation in the pSoBid Cohort. PLoS ONE. 2011. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0022521.
BibTeX
@article{paul2011Accele, title = {Accelerated Telomere Attrition Is Associated with Relative Household Income, Diet and Inflammation in the pSoBid Cohort}, author = {Paul G. Shiels and Liane M. McGlynn and Alan MacIntyre and P. Johnson and G. David Batty and Harry Burns and Jonathan Cavanagh and Kevin A. Deans and Ian Ford and Alex McConnachie and Agnes McGinty and Jennifer McLean and Keith Millar and Naveed Sattar and Carol Tannahill and Yoga N. Velupillai and Chris J. Packard}, journal = {PLoS ONE}, year = {2011}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0022521}, }

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