Frontiers in Aging (Nov 2024)

Telomere length and cognitive changes in 7,877 older UK adults of European ancestry

  • Amy Packer,
  • Leena Habiballa,
  • Esteban Tato-Barcia,
  • Esteban Tato-Barcia,
  • Gerome Breen,
  • Gerome Breen,
  • Helen Brooker,
  • Anne Corbett,
  • Ryan Arathimos,
  • Clive Ballard,
  • Adam Hampshire,
  • Abbie Palmer,
  • Danai Dima,
  • Danai Dima,
  • Dag Aarsland,
  • Byron Creese,
  • Margherita Malanchini,
  • Margherita Malanchini,
  • Timothy R. Powell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fragi.2024.1480326
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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BackgroundTelomere length (TL) has been linked to cognitive function, decline and dementia. This study aimed to explore whether both measured TL and genetic disposition for TL predict dimensions of cognitive performance in a longitudinal sample of older UK adults.MethodsWe analysed data from PROTECT study participants aged ≥50 years without a dementia diagnosis, who had completed longitudinal cognitive testing. We calculated polygenic scores for telomere length (PGS-TL) for 7,877 participants and measured relative telomere length (RTL) in a subgroup of 846 participants using DNA extracted from saliva samples collected within 6 months either side of their baseline cognitive testing. Latent growth models were used to examine whether RTL and PGS-TL predict both baseline and longitudinal changes in cognitive performance (4 time-points, annually).ResultsIn the whole sample, we did not observe significant associations between either measure of telomere length and initial or longitudinal changes in cognitive performance. Stratifying by median age, in older adults (≥ ∼62 years), longer baseline RTL showed a nominal association with poorer baseline verbal reasoning performance (n = 423, Mintercept = 47.58, B = −1.05, p = .011) and PGS-TL was associated with performance over time (n = 3,939; slope factor, Mslope = 3.23, B = −0.45, p = .001; slope2 factor, Mslope2 = 0.21, B = 0.13, p = .002).ConclusionOur findings suggest either the absence of a significant relationship between telomere length (RTL and PGS-TL) and cognitive performance (baseline and change over time), or possibly a weak age-dependent and domain-specific relationship, in older adults of European ancestry. More research is needed in representative and ancestrally diverse samples over a longer assessment period. Alternative biological ageing indicators may still provide utility in the early detection of individuals at risk for cognitive decline (e.g., pace-of ageing epigenetic clocks).

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