Forum for Science, Industry and Business
Sponsored by:     Siemens  n-tv 
Search our Site:

Topic (optional):

 

Home Reports Life Sciences Content

Maximum longevity inherited from the father

next article
25.10.2005

 


The parts of the genetic make-up that are thought to determine an individual’s maximum possible longevity, so-called telomeres, are inherited from the father but not the mother. This is shown by a research team at Umeå University in the coming issue of the U.S. scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Telomeres are genetic material with repetitive content at the ends of DNA, and their main function is believed to be to protect the rest of the genetic material from degradation. Telomeres are shortened each time a cell divides, which in broad terms means that the longer a cell’s telomeres are, the longer the individual can live, in theory. A person’s telomeres are shortened with age, which the findings of the study indeed show: telomeres were shortened by an average of 21 nitrogen base pairs per year in the subjects studied.


The study, soon to appear in the U.S. scientific journal PNAS, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, was carried out on 132 healthy subjects in 49 different families with no close kinship to each other in northern Sweden. The subjects consisted of fathers and mothers (mean age 66 years) and their daughters and sons (mean age 37 years). Blood samples were taken, and mononuclear immune cells were culled.

Half of these were simply frozen, while the other half were infected with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and cultured for 18-55 days, whereupon the surviving cells were frozen. DNA was then extracted from both cell types using standardized techniques, and the length of the telomeres was ascertained.

The findings show that changes in the length of the telomeres in the cultured cells are determined by the original length of the telomeres, and the length of the telomeres in the second generation, both sons and daughters, proved to be inherited from the father.

The work was carried out by doctoral candidate Katarina Nordfjäll and Professor Göran Roos at the Division of Pathology, Department of Medical Biosciences, Umeå University, and Research Engineer Åsa Larfalk, Statistician Petter Lindgren, and Professor Dan Holmber, all three at the Division of Medical and Clinical Genetics, Department of Medical Biosciences, Umeå University.

Bertil Born | Source: alphagalileo
Further information: www.umu.se/medfak/forskning/PNAS-telomerer-24-okt.pdf

next article

More articles from Life Sciences:

nachricht Sweet! -- sugar plays key role in cell division
08.02.2010 | Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions

nachricht NTU researchers complete the world's first in-depth study of the malaria parasite genome
08.02.2010 | Nanyang Technological University

All articles from Life Sciences >>>

B2B Search

Product / Service
Company / Organisation

Latest News

Early Artificial Pancreas Trials Show Benefits for Kids, Teenagers with Diabetes While Sleeping Overnight

08.02.2010 | Studies and Analyses

Princeton scientist makes a leap in quantum computing

08.02.2010 | Information Technology

Sweet! -- sugar plays key role in cell division

08.02.2010 | Life Sciences

VideoLinks
More VideoLinks >>>

Event News

Asia-Pacific Symposium on Information and Telecommunication Technologies 2010 (APSITT 2010)

04.02.2010 | Event News

The Engineering Conference (EnCon 2010)

04.02.2010 | Event News

Homeland Security Science and Technology University Network Summit

01.02.2010 | Event News