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发表于 2012-6-12 23:58 |只看该作者 |倒序浏览 |打印
本帖最后由 StephenW 于 2012-6-12 23:59 编辑

Older Dads Have Healthier Kids?   
New research finds that older men have children and grandchildren with longer telomeres, pointing to possible health benefits of delayed reproduction.

By Jef Akst |  June 11, 2012   
   
                                                                                 istockphoto.com, Felix Möckel

                                                                Men who chose to have children later in life have gotten a lot of heat recently, with research churning up evidence that the older a man’s age at time of reproduction, the greater the risk of autism, schizophrenia, and other disorders in their kids. But a new study, published today (June 11) in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, may have identified a health benefit that older dad’s bestow upon future generations—longer telomeres.
Telomeres, the ends of linear chromosomes that serve to protect the coding DNA of the genome, have been linked to several diseases, including cancer, as well as aging. (See last month’s feature story, “Telomeres in Disease.”) Longer telomeres have been linked with better health and longer lives, though the causal relationship between telomeres and health is still unclear. The new study, which looked at multiple generations of a Filipino population, confirms the finding of previous work that older dads have children with longer telomeres, and extends the findings to grandchildren as well. Specifically, an individual’s telomere length increased with the age of their paternal grandfather at the time of their father’s birth, as well their father’s age at their birth
“The lengthening of telomeres predicted by each year that the father’s or grandfather’s reproduction are delayed is equal to the yearly shortening of [telomere length] seen in middle-age to elderly women in this sample, pointing to potentially important impacts on health and the pace of senescent decline…” the authors wrote. “This finding suggests a mechanism by which humans could extend late-life function as average age at reproduction is delayed in a lineage.”
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