Anticipation of Stressful Situations Accelerates Cellular Aging
University of California- San Francisco
February 21, 2012
Short telomeres
associated with increased risk for chronic diseases.
The ability to anticipate
future events allows us to plan and exert control over our lives, but
it may also contribute to stress-related increased risk for the
diseases of aging, according to a study by UCSF researchers.
In a study of 50 women, about half of them caring for relatives with
dementia, the psychologists found that those most threatened by the
anticipation of stressful tasks in the laboratory and through public
speaking and solving math problems, looked older at the cellular level.
The researchers assessed cellular age by measuring telomeres, which are
the protective caps on the ends of chromosomes. Short telomeres index
older cellular age and are associated with increased risk for a host of
chronic diseases of aging, including cancer, heart disease and stroke.
"We are getting closer to understanding how chronic stress translates
into the present moment," said Elissa Epel, PhD, an associate professor
in the UCSF Department of Psychiatry and a lead investigator on the
study. "As stress researchers, we try to examine the psychological
process of how people respond to a stressful event and how that impacts
their neurobiology and cellular health. And we're making some strides
in that."
The researchers also
found evidence that caregivers anticipated more threat than
non-caregivers when told that they would be asked to perform the same
public speaking and math tasks. This tendency to anticipate more threat
put them at increased risk for short telomeres. Based on that, the
researchers propose that higher levels of anticipated threat in daily
life may promote cellular aging in chronically stressed individuals.
"How you respond to a brief stressful experience in the laboratory may
reveal a lot about how you respond to stressful experiences in your
daily life," said Aoife O'Donovan, PhD, a Society in Science: Branco
Weiss Fellow at UCSF and the study's lead author. "Our findings are
preliminary for now, but they suggest that the major forms of stress in
your life may influence how your respond to more minor forms of stress,
such as losing your keys, getting stuck in traffic or leading a meeting
at work. Our goal is to gain better understanding of how psychological
stress promotes biological aging so that we can design targeted
interventions that reduce risk for disease in stressed individuals. We
now have preliminary evidence that higher anticipatory threat
perception may be one such mechanism."
The study will be published in the May issue of the journal Brain,
Behavior and Immunity.
Research
on telomeres, and the enzyme that makes them, was pioneered by three
Americans, including UCSF molecular biologist and co-author on this
manuscript Elizabeth Blackburn, PhD, who co-discovered the telomerase
enzyme in 1985. The scientists received the Nobel Prize in Physiology
or Medicine in 2009 for this work.
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