Skip to content
Preprint · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Telomere length loss due to smoking and metabolic traits

Jardi Huzen, Liza S. M. Wong, Dirk J. van Veldhuisen, Nilesh J. Samani, Aeilko H. Zwinderman, Veryan Codd, Richard Cawthon, Germaine F.J.D. Benus, Iwan C.C. van der Horst, G. Navis, Stephan J. L. Bakker, R. T. Gansevoort, Paul E. de Jong, Hans L. Hillege, Wiek H. van Gilst

Journal of Internal Medicine · 2013 · ▲ 175 citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Human age-dependent telomere(definition) attrition and telomere shortening are associated with several age-associated diseases and poorer overall survival. The aim of this study was to determine longitudinal leucocyte telomere length dynamics and identify factors associated with temporal changes in telomere length. DESIGN AND METHODS: Leucocyte telomere length was measured by quantitative polymerase chain reaction in 8074 participants from the Prevention of Renal and Vascular End-stage Disease (PREVEND) study, an ongoing community-based prospective cohort study initiated in 1997. Follow-up data were available at two time-points up to 2007. Leucocyte telomere length was measured, on between one and three separate occasions, in a total of 16 783 DNA samples. Multilevel growth models were created to identify the factors that influence leucocyte telomere dynamics. RESULTS: We observed an average attrition rate of 0.47 ± 0.16 relative telomere length units (RTLUs) per year in the study population aged 48 (range 39-60) years at baseline. Annual telomere attrition rate increased with age (P < 0.001) and was faster on average in men than in women (P for interaction 0.043). The major independent factors determining telomere attrition rate were active smoking (approximately tripled the loss of RTLU per year, P < 0.0001) and multiple traits of the metabolic syndrome (waist-hip ratio, P = 0.007; blood glucose level, P = 0.045, and HDL cholesterol level, P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Smoking and variables linked to the metabolic syndrome are modifiable lifestyle factors that accelerate telomere attrition in humans. The higher rate of cellular ageing may mediate the link between smoking and the metabolic syndrome to an increased risk of several age-associated diseases.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1111/joim.12149
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-02 MST

Cite this

APA
Huzen, J., Wong, L.S.M., Veldhuisen, D.J.V., Samani, N.J., Zwinderman, A.H., Codd, V., Cawthon, R., Benus, G.F., Horst, I.C.V.D., Navis, G., Bakker, S.J.L., Gansevoort, R.T., Jong, P.E.D., Hillege, H.L., Gilst, W.H.V., Boer, R.A.D., &amp; Harst, P.V.D. (2013). Telomere length loss due to smoking and metabolic traits. <em>Journal of Internal Medicine</em>. https://doi.org/10.1111/joim.12149
Vancouver
Huzen J, Wong LSM, Veldhuisen DJV, Samani NJ, Zwinderman AH, Codd V, et al. Telomere length loss due to smoking and metabolic traits. Journal of Internal Medicine. 2013. doi:10.1111/joim.12149.
BibTeX
@unpublished{jardi2013Telome, title = {Telomere length loss due to smoking and metabolic traits}, author = {Jardi Huzen and Liza S. M. Wong and Dirk J. van Veldhuisen and Nilesh J. Samani and Aeilko H. Zwinderman and Veryan Codd and Richard Cawthon and Germaine F.J.D. Benus and Iwan C.C. van der Horst and G. Navis and Stephan J. L. Bakker and R. T. Gansevoort and Paul E. de Jong and Hans L. Hillege and Wiek H. van Gilst and Rudolf A. de Boer and Pim van der Harst}, journal = {Journal of Internal Medicine}, year = {2013}, doi = {10.1111/joim.12149}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings