(Press-News.org) A small pilot study shows for the first  time that changes in diet, exercise, stress management and social support may result  in longer telomeres, the parts of chromosomes that affect aging. 
It is the first controlled trial to  show that any intervention might lengthen telomeres over time. 
The study will be published online on  Sept. 16, 2013 in The Lancet  Oncology.
The study was conducted by scientists  at UC San Francisco and the Preventive Medicine Research Institute, a nonprofit  public research institute in Sausalito, Calif. that investigates the effect of  diet and lifestyle choices on health and disease. The researchers say they hope  the results will inspire larger trials to test the validity of the  findings.  
“Our genes, and our telomeres, are not  necessarily our fate,” said lead author Dean Ornish, MD, UCSF clinical  professor of medicine, and founder and president of the Preventive Medicine  Research Institute. 
“So often people think ‘Oh, I have bad  genes, there’s nothing I can do about it,’” Ornish said. “But these findings  indicate that telomeres may lengthen to the degree that people change how they  live. Research indicates that longer telomeres are associated with fewer  illnesses and longer life.” 
Telomeres are the protective caps on  the ends of chromosomes that affect how quickly cells age. They are  combinations of DNA and protein that protect the ends of chromosomes and help  them remain stable. As they become shorter, and as their structural integrity  weakens, the cells age and die quicker. 
In recent years, shorter telomeres have  become associated with a broad range of aging-related diseases, including many  forms of cancer, stroke, vascular dementia, cardiovascular disease, obesity,  osteoporosis and diabetes.
For five years, the researchers  followed 35 men with localized, early-stage prostate cancer to explore the  relationship between comprehensive lifestyle changes, and telomere length and  telomerase activity. All the men were engaged in active surveillance, which  involves closely monitoring a patient’s condition through screening and  biopsies. 
Ten of the patients embarked on lifestyle  changes that included: a plant-based diet (high in fruits, vegetables and  unrefined grains, and low in fat and refined carbohydrates); moderate exercise  (walking 30 minutes a day, six days a week); stress reduction (gentle  yoga-based stretching, breathing, meditation). They also participated in weekly  group support.  
They were compared to the other 25  study participants who were not asked to make major lifestyle changes. 
The group that made the lifestyle  changes experienced a “significant” increase in telomere length of  approximately 10 percent. Further, the more people changed their behavior by  adhering to the recommended lifestyle program, the more dramatic their improvements  in telomere length, the scientists learned.
By contrast, the men in the control  group who were not asked to alter their lifestyle had measurably shorter  telomeres – nearly 3 percent shorter – when the five-year study ended. Telomere  length usually decreases over time. 
The researchers say the findings may  not be limited to men with prostate cancer, and are likely to be relevant to  the general population.   
“We looked at telomeres in the  participants’ blood, not their prostate tissue,” said Ornish. 
The new study is a follow up to a similar,  three-month pilot investigation in 2008 in which the same participants were  asked to follow the same lifestyle program. After three months, the men in the  initial study exhibited significantly increased telomerase activity. Telomerase  is an enzyme that repairs and lengthens telomeres.   
The new study was designed to determine  if the lifestyle changes would affect telomere length and telomerase activity in  these men over a longer time period.
        
  “This was a breakthrough finding that  needs to be confirmed by larger studies,” said co-senior author Peter R. Carroll, MD, MPH,  professor and chair of the UCSF Department of Urology. 
“Telomere shortening increases the risk  of a wide variety of chronic diseases,” Carroll said. “We believe that  increases in telomere length may help to prevent these conditions and perhaps  even lengthen lifespan.”
INFORMATION:
Other co-authors from UCSF include  senior author and Nobel laureate Elizabeth H. Blackburn,  PhD, professor of biochemistry and biophysics; Jue Lin, PhD, associate research  biochemist; June M. Chan, DSc,  associate professor of epidemiology & biostatistics; Elissa Epel, PhD, associate  professor of psychiatry; Mark Jesus M. Magbanua, associate specialist; Jennifer Daubenmier and Nancy K. Hills, PhD,  associate adjunct professors; and Nita Chainani-Wu, DMD,  MPH, PhD, assistant clinical professor.  
The research was supported by the U.S.  Department of Defense; the National Institutes of Health and National Cancer  Institute grant number RO1 R01CA101042;   Furlotti Family Foundation; Bahna Foundation; DeJoria Foundation; Walton  Family Foundation; Resnick Foundation; Greenbaum Foundation; Natwin Foundation;  Safeway Foundation; and the Prostate Cancer Foundation.
Jue Lin, Elissa Epel and Elizabeth  Blackburn were co-founders of Telome Health Inc., a diagnostic company that  assess telomere biology – THI had no relationship to this study. Dean Ornish  works with Healthways, Inc. to educate and support people in making healthier  behaviors. The other authors declared no conflicts of interest.
UCSF is a leading university dedicated  to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level  education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in  patient care. It includes top-ranked graduate schools of dentistry, medicine,  nursing and pharmacy, a graduate division with nationally renowned programs in  basic biomedical, translational and population sciences, as well as a  preeminent biomedical research enterprise and two top-ranked hospitals, UCSF  Medical Center and UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital. 
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Lifestyle changes may lengthen telomeres, a measure of cell aging
Diet, meditation, exercise can improve key element of immune cell aging, UCSF scientists report
2013-09-17
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[Press-News.org] Lifestyle changes may lengthen telomeres, a measure of cell agingDiet, meditation, exercise can improve key element of immune cell aging, UCSF scientists report