A new way to measure the length of a single telomere could provide information on how rapidly we are aging and what we need to do to slow it down.
Telomeres—the caps at the ends of chromosomes that protect our genetic materials from the brunt of cellular wear and tear—are known to shorten and fray over time. Lifestyle, diet, and stress can exacerbate this process, leading to early loss of telomere protection and increasing the chances of early aging and lifestyle diseases, such as cancer and heart diseases.
To date, approaches for measuring biological aging based on telomere length have been limited as they can only ascertain average telomere lengths within a pool of DNA fragments, or are time-consuming and require highly-skilled specialists.
Being able to accurately and efficiently measure the length of an individual’s telomeres could open the doors to developing lifestyle interventions that slow aging and prevent disease.
“We applied a novel approach that uses DNA sequences—we call them ‘telobaits’—to latch onto the ends of telomeres in large pools of DNA fragments, like fishing in pond. Then, with specific scissor-like enzymes, we snip the telomeres out of the pools,” says Li Shang, associate professor with the Duke-NUS Cancer & Stem Cell Biology Programme and senior author of the study in Nature Communications.
“Using high-throughput genetic sequencing technology, we were able to read the DNA ‘letters’ that comprised each individual telomere, allowing us to very precisely measure their lengths.”
The team successfully validated this approach when they tested it using human cell lines and patient cells. Interestingly, the sequencing results revealed that the genetic sequences within certain parts of the telomeres, known as telomeric variant sequences, were distinct to each individual person.
“Based on this insight, a future area of study for us is the possible use of telomeric variant sequences as a means of biological identification, which could potentially prove useful for expanding the field of forensic science,” Li says.
The team believes this new approach could be used as a predictive biomarker for human aging and disease at the individual level, as well as for population-level studies on the impacts of lifestyle, diet, and the environment on human health.
“This method for telomere length measurement is an important advance in the field of aging research,” says senior coauthor Angela Koh, associate professor who is senior consultant with the department of cardiology at NHCS and associate professor with the SingHealth Duke-NUS Cardiovascular Sciences Academic Clinical Programme.
“From the clinical perspective, we view this as a very promising method for understanding clinical diseases associated with aging such as cardiovascular disease. Our partnership signifies what can be achieved by clinician-and-biomedical scientists to bring complex lab methods towards simpler, quantifiable methods that may be used in broader clinical labs in the future.”
Additional coauthors are from the Cancer Science Institute of Singapore; the National University of Singapore; A*STAR’s Genome Institute of Singapore and Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology; National Cancer Centre Singapore; Singapore General Hospital; the SingHealth Duke-NUS Institute of Precision Medicine; Kumamoto University (Japan); Guangzhou Medical University (China); the Chinese University of Hong Kong-Shenzhen (China); Shanghai University (China); and the University of California, Davis.
Source: Duke-NUS