Abstract

Recent work has linked psychological stress with premature cellular aging as indexed by reduced leukocyte telomere length. The combination of shorter telomeres with high telomerase activity (TA) may be indicative of active cell stress. We hypothesized that older individuals characterized by shorter telomeres with high TA in unstimulated leukocytes would show signs of high allostatic load and low levels of protective psychosocial resources. We studied 333 healthy men and women aged 54-76 y who underwent laboratory testing in which we measured cardiovascular, neuroendocrine, and inflammatory responses to standardized mental stress tasks. The tasks elicited prompt increases in blood pressure (BP), heart rate, cortisol, and mediators of inflammation and reductions in heart rate variability, returning toward baseline levels following stress. However, men having shorter telomeres with high TA showed blunted poststress recovery in systolic BP, heart rate variability, and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, together with reduced responsivity in diastolic BP, heart rate, and cortisol, in comparison to men with longer telomeres or men with shorter telomeres and low TA. Shorter telomeres with high TA were also associated with reduced social support, lower optimism, higher hostility, and greater early life adversity. These effects were independent of age, socioeconomic status, and body mass index. We did not observe differences among older women. Our findings suggest that active cell stress is associated with impaired physiological stress responses and impoverished psychosocial resources, reflecting an integration of cellular, systemic, and psychological stress processes potentially relevant to health in older men.

Highlights

  • Recent work has linked psychological stress with premature cellular aging as indexed by reduced leukocyte telomere length

  • blood pressure (BP) showed a partial recovery to baseline values at 45 and 75 min following stress, whereas heart rate and heart rate variability recovered to levels below and above baseline, respectively

  • We found that in men, poststress recovery in systolic BP was associated with telomere group

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Summary

Introduction

Recent work has linked psychological stress with premature cellular aging as indexed by reduced leukocyte telomere length. Shorter telomeres with high TA were associated with reduced social support, lower optimism, higher hostility, and greater early life adversity. Acute mental stress appears to increase telomerase enzymatic activity at least transiently [24], and it has been suggested that high telomerase activity (TA) in conjunction with shorter TL may be indicative of a stressed system [25] This pattern may be relevant to cardiovascular disease; Kroenke et al. This pattern may be relevant to cardiovascular disease; Kroenke et al These findings indicate that the combination of shorter leukocyte telomeres with high telomerase activity is associated with stress-related impairment of function at both the biological and psychological levels. Older men with the shorter telomere/high telomerase phenotype show impoverished resources for dealing with stress, including low levels of social support and optimism and higher levels of hostility. The integrated approach taken in this study advances our understanding of the cellular substrate of stress-related processes and documents the dynamic interplay between social environmental exposures and the mechanisms underlying chromosomal integrity

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