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  • "What to Eat to Prevent Telomere Shortening"

  • Identifying simple strategies to prevent or delay age-related

  • diseases is a major public health concern.

  • But how could you measure the effects of such strategies?

  • Well, telomere length is a reliable hallmark of biological aging

  • and the risk of developing age-related chronic diseases.

  • For those of you who missed all my telomere videos --

  • which date back over a decade -- what is a telomere,

  • and why does it matter how long they are?

  • Telomere comes from the Greek for "end" "part" of our chromosomes.

  • Telomeres cap the ends of our chromosomes

  • like shoelace tips to essentially keep our DNA from fraying.

  • Telomere length is important since there's a minimum length required,

  • but every time our cells divide, a bit of the telomere is lost

  • and once they get too short, the cell can die.

  • That's why telomeres are sometimes called the molecular clock of cells.

  • Every year they get shorter and shorter, kind of like life's fuse,

  • but in some people that fuse burns faster than in others.

  • Accelerated telomere shortening has been identified as a key biomarker

  • for accelerated aging, disease risk, and diminished longevity.

  • But there's some good news.

  • Telomere shortening can be counteracted by an enzyme

  • in our cells called telomerase.

  • Telomerase can replenish the lost bits and elongate our telomeres.

  • So how can we boost this enzyme to, in effect, reverse cellular aging?

  • Exercise may help. Those with high levels

  • of physical activity have longer telomeres,

  • whereas obese individuals and smokers tend to have shorter telomeres,

  • along with those getting inadequate sleep.

  • But what about nutrition?

  • Globally, we might expect that any antioxidant or anti-inflammatory diet

  • could be protective for telomeres.

  • So we're talking like a whole food plant-based diet

  • with a reduced intake of meat and, in fact, swapping out animal protein

  • in general in favor of plant-based proteins.

  • Given that plant-based foods have well-known antioxidant

  • and anti-inflammatory effects, there are fair grounds to believe

  • that the consumption of plant-based foods

  • can help to counteract telomere attrition,

  • but you don't know if it actually would, until you put it to the test.

  • Dr. Dean Ornish, along with the Nobel laureate

  • who co-discovered the telomerase enzyme,

  • studied the effects of comprehensive lifestyle changes

  • on telomerase activity and telomere length

  • using the same plant-based diet and lifestyle program

  • shown to reverse the progression of heart disease and

  • early-stage prostate cancer, and maybe even early-stage Alzheimer's.

  • And telomere length shortened in the control group,

  • and they aged five years as expected,

  • but didn't just not shorten as much or hold steady,

  • but actually lengthened in the plant-based lifestyle group.

  • Whereas in a similar study across a similar time frame,

  • there was no difference in telomere length when just giving

  • people the more typical low-fat dairy, skinless chicken breast,

  • generic-type healthier dietary advice.

  • Antioxidant-rich plant foods help maintain telomere length.

  • In contrast, total and saturated fat intake and consumption

  • of refined flour grains, meat and meat products,

  • and soda relate to shorter telomeres.

  • People eating more anti-inflammatory diets

  • tend to have longer telomeres,

  • and the greater the anti-inflammatory potential of the diet over time,

  • the greater potential to significantly slow down

  • the rate of telomere shortening.

  • Those with the most pro-inflammatory diets

  • had almost twice the risk of accelerated telomere shortening.

  • The most pro-inflammatory food component is saturated fat,

  • found in meat, dairy, eggs and junk, along with other pro-inflammatory

  • food components like cholesterol and trans fat.

  • Omega-3's tend to be anti-inflammatory,

  • but when put to the test, fish oil supplements

  • failed to have any significant telomere effects.

  • The most anti-inflammatory food component is fiber.

  • And indeed, if you look at dietary fiber intake and telomere length

  • in a representative sampling of thousands of US adults,

  • even though nobody was eating enough,

  • the more fiber people consumed,

  • the longer their telomeres tended to be.

  • Since there appeared to be a straight-line increase,

  • they could do the math,

  • and it appeared that just a 10-gram increase in fiber per 1000 calories

  • would equate to four fewer years of biologic aging,

  • whereas, for example, the consumption of soda

  • appeared to increase cell aging

  • by almost two years per daily serving.

  • Now, of course, diets high in fiber and diets with significant amounts

  • of fruits, vegetables, and whole grains go hand in hand.

  • So fiber may just be a marker

  • for eating lots of whole healthy plant foods,

  • but are there any specific plants associated with telomere lengthening?

  • We'll find out next.

"What to Eat to Prevent Telomere Shortening"

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