Article

Take Your Vitamins and Grow Your Telomeres: We Really Have Found the "Fountain of Youth

Topic: DiabetesBy Cheryl WinterPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,204 legacy views

Obviously you know what vitamins are, but what are telomeres?

The ageing and lifespan of normal, healthy cells are linked to the so-called telomerase shortening mechanism, which limits cells to a fixed number of divisions. The purpose of telomeres is critical to the life of the cell. The telomeres are sections of DNA at the end of each chromosome, that serve as a cap to the genetic material and function to ensure the cell’s chromosomes do not fuse with each other or rearrange during normal cell replication, which could lead to cancer. If cells divided without telomeres, they would lose the necessary information at the end of each chromosome. In this way, telomeres prevent chromosomal fraying, much like the ends of shoelaces prevent unraveling.

In 2009, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was award to three scientists. Elizabeth Blackburn, Carol Greider and Jack Szostack, who discovered that cells can maintain the length of their telomeres with an enzyme called telomerase, which adds genetic material at the end of the DNA strand, thus lengthening the number of times it can replicate, which ultimately prolongs the life of the cell. It is not active in most cells, but is active in stem cells, germ cells, hair follicles and most cancer cells.

Normally, with each replication of the cells, telomeres shorten and when totally consumed the cells are destroyed or die (apoptosis). As reported in Nature, 2011, scientists at the Harvard-affiliated Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, found that the basic cause of age-related health decline is malfunctioning telomeres and that telomeres are highly susceptible to oxidative stress, which will shorten telomere length and enhance cellular aging. Therefore telemere length is a marker of biological aging. Shorter telomeres have been associated with metabolic abnormalities, obesity, and several degenerative diseases including cancer, diabetes, dementia and cardiovascular disease.

How To Lengthen Your Telomeres (& find the “Fountain of Youth”)?

According to the research published in the American Jou
al of Clinical Nutrition in 2009 at King’s College London, when leukocyte telomere length (LTL) was measured in 2,160 women, ages 18 to 79, those with higher levels of vitamin D produced naturally by the body through exposure to sunlight, had longer telomeres. These results, according to the lead researcher, Professor Brent Richards, although not proven to be a cause and effect, demonstrated for the first time that people who have higher levels of vitamin D may age more slowly than people with lower levels of vitamin D.

In the research studies of Honglei Chen, MD, PhD and his co-workers from National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (also published in the American Jou
al of Clinical Nutrition, 2009), the multivitamin use and nutrient intakes of 586 women aged between 35 and 74 were analyzed, along with their telomere length in the Sister Study. A 146-item food questionnaire was used to determine multivitamin use and nutrient intakes. Compared to non-multivitamin users, the researchers noted that the telomeres were on average 5.1 per cent longer for daily multivitamin users. In an attempt to identify specific nutrients that could be behind the observations, intakes of vitamins C and E from foods showed a positive relationship with telomere length.

Other than taking multivitamins and getting adequate vitamins C, D and E,
minimizing associated risk factors that are linked to shorten telomere activity is recommended, such as: • reducing oxidative stress • correcting micronutrient deficiencies, in particular vitamins C, D, & E • changing sedentary lifestyle by increasing physical activity • avoiding weight gain or obesity • correcting insulin resistance
How Do You Measure Telomere Length?

We can now measure our telomere length with a simple blood test. By using a ratio of the genetic material contained in a nucleated white blood cell telomere relative to the length of a single copy gene of known size to calculate an approximate telomere score. This ratio is then compared to a population of people with similar chronological age.

Reference: SpectraCell Laboratories, Inc. 2009

Article author

About the Author

Cheryl Winter is a board-certified family nurse practitioner and registered dietitian with advanced training in diabetes and weight management. She is President of DiabeteSteps Rx®, a full-service onsite and virtual integrative diabetes and weight management clinic. By "integrating" both a functional & conventional approach to diabetes and its associated medical conditions including hypertension, high cholesterol, overweight and obesity, there is the potential to REVERSE these metabolic conditions. Let her help you "transform" your weight and health. Access her FREE E-Report at: http://DiabeteStepsRx.com and begin your transformation now.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

If you have diabetes you know the day-to-day struggle the chronic disease brings with it. You have experienced the frustrations, complications, and discouragement from struggling to manage your condition. As with any chronic disease, there is more to situation than the search for a cure. Learning to live with diabetes is about both healing and curing.

Related piece

Article

Before you consider beginning yet another "diet," you might first consider learning what your "number" is. You are a very unique individual. In addition to having your own social security number, your own PIN numbers, your own phone numbers, there is yet another number that is unique to you. That number is your METABOLIC RATE, a representation of your metabolism. This is a number that is expressed in calories per day, and it is the number of calories your body needs for vital body functions, such as circulation, brain function, breathing, and temperature control.

Related piece

Article

Health doesn’t ensure happiness, but it’s hard to be happy without it. However, if anyone pays attention to wellness and works towards his/her fitness goals, happiness is just a natural by-product. Over half of North Americans are either overweight or obese. Yet here is a shocking statistic: two out of five women and one out of five men would trade three to five years of their life to achieve their weight goals.

Related piece

Article

Beautiful hair begins with good health. It needs loving care and protection. What you don’t know can hurt you. What you do know can mean the difference between a gorgeous mane and a dull hair with many unsightly signs, such as dandruff. Many don’t realize that their hair is subject to damage by wind, pollutants, sun and blow-dryer. If hair is left in a dry state of abuse, it can lead to severe hair and scalp problems, not to mention slow hair growth. Problems and solutions: FIRST, find out if your hair is normal, dry or oily.r

Related piece