Sedentary
lifestyles associated with accelerated aging
process
Newswise — Individuals
who are physically active during their
leisure time appear to be biologically
younger than those with sedentary
lifestyles, according to a report in the
January 28 issue of Archives of Internal
Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
Regular exercisers have
lower rates of cardiovascular disease, type
2 diabetes, cancer, high blood pressure,
obesity and osteoporosis, according to
background information in the article.
“A sedentary lifestyle
increases the propensity to aging-related
disease and premature death,” the authors
write. “Inactivity may diminish life
expectancy not only by predisposing to
aging-related diseases but also because it
may influence the aging process itself.”
Lynn F. Cherkas, Ph.D.,
of King’s College London, and colleagues
studied 2,401 white twins, administering
questionnaires on physical activity level,
smoking habits and socioeconomic status.
The participants also
provided a blood sample from which DNA was
extracted. The researchers examined the
length of telomeres—repeated sequences at
the end of chromosomes—in the twins’ white
blood cells (leukocytes). Leukocyte
telomeres progressively shorten over time
and may serve as a marker of biological age.
Telomere length
decreased with age, with an average loss of
21 nucleotides (structural units) per year.
Men and women who were less physically
active in their leisure time had shorter
leukocyte telomeres than those who were more
active.
“Such a relationship
between leukocyte telomere length and
physical activity level remained significant
after adjustment for body mass index,
smoking, socioeconomic status and physical
activity at work,” the authors write.
“The mean
difference in leukocyte telomere length
between the most active [who performed an
average of 199 minutes of physical activity
per week] and least active [16 minutes of
physical activity per week] subjects was 200
nucleotides, which means that the most
active subjects had telomeres the same
length as sedentary individuals up to 10
years younger, on average.”
A sub-analysis
comparing pairs in which twins had different
levels of physical activity showed similar
results.
Oxidative stress—damage
caused to cells by exposure to oxygen—and
inflammation are likely mechanisms by which
sedentary lifestyles shorten telomeres, the
authors suggest. In addition, perceived
stress levels have been linked to telomere
length.
Physical activity may
reduce psychological stress, thus mitigating
its effect on telomeres and the aging
process.
“The U.S. guidelines
recommend that 30 minutes of
moderate-intensity physical activity at
least five days a week can have significant
health benefits,” the authors write.
“Our results underscore
the vital importance of these guidelines.
They show that adults who partake in regular
physical activity are biologically younger
than sedentary individuals. This conclusion
provides a powerful message that could be
used by clinicians to promote the potential
anti-aging effect of regular exercise.”
Editorial: More Research Needed to Verify
Exercise-Aging Link
Additional work needs to be done to show a
direct relationship between aging and
physical activity, writes Jack M. Guralnik,
M.D., Ph.D., of the National Institute on
Aging, Bethesda, Md., in an accompanying
editorial.
“Persons who exercise
are different from sedentary persons in many
ways, and although certain variables were
adjusted for in this analysis, many
additional factors could be responsible for
the biological differences between active
and sedentary persons, a situation referred
to by epidemiologists as residual
confounding,” Dr. Guralnik writes.
“Nevertheless, this article serves as one of
many pieces of evidence that telomere length
might be targeted in studying aging
outcomes.”