Telomere Science Library

Publications, Presentations, and Videos
about the Nobel-Prize Winning Science of Telomere Biology

Arsenic exposure, telomere length, and expression of telomere-related genes among Bangladeshi individuals.

Authors: Jianjun J. Gao, Shantanu S. Roy, Lin L. Tong, Maria M. Argos, Farzana F. Jasmine, Ronald R. Rahaman, Muhammad M. Rakibuz-Zaman, Faruque F. Parvez, Alauddin A. Ahmed, Samar K SK. Hore, Golam G. Sarwar, Vesna V. Slavkovich, Mohammad M. Yunus, Mahfuzar M. Rahman, John A JA. Baron, Joseph H JH. Graziano, Habibul H. Ahsan, Brandon L BL. Pierce
Published: 11/25/2014, Environmental research

Background

Inorganic arsenic is a carcinogen whose mode of action may involve telomere dysfunction. Recent epidemiological studies suggest that chronic arsenic exposure is associated with longer telomeres and altered expression of telomere-related genes in peripheral blood. In this study, we evaluated the association of urinary arsenic concentration with expression of telomere-related genes and telomere length in Bangladeshi individuals with a wide range of arsenic exposure through naturally contaminated drinking water.

Methods

We used linear regression models to estimate associations between urinary arsenic and array-based expression measures for 69 telomere related genes using mononuclear cell RNA samples from 1799 individuals. Association between arsenic exposure and a qPCR-based telomere length measure was assessed among 167 individuals.

Results

Urinary arsenic was positively associated with expression of WRN, and negatively associated with TERF2, DKC1, TERF2IP and OBFC1 (all P<0.00035, Bonferroni-corrected threshold). We detected interaction between urinary arsenic and arsenic metabolism efficiency in relation to expression of WRN (P for interaction =0.00008). In addition, we observed that very high arsenic exposure was associated with longer telomeres compared to very low exposure (P=0.02).

Discussion

Our findings suggest that arsenic's carcinogenic mode of action may involve alteration of telomere maintenance and/or telomere damage. This study extends our knowledge regarding the effect of arsenic on telomere length and expression of telomere-related genes.

Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
PubMed Full Text