Scientific Reports (Jan 2023)

Telomere length dynamics measured by flow-FISH in patients with obesity undergoing bariatric surgery

  • Benjamin Rolles,
  • Monica S. V. Ferreira,
  • Margherita Vieri,
  • Karl P. Rheinwalt,
  • Sophia M. Schmitz,
  • Patrick H. Alizai,
  • Ulf Neumann,
  • Tim H. Brümmendorf,
  • Fabian Beier,
  • Tom F. Ulmer,
  • Mareike Tometten

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-27196-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Obesity has negative effects on comorbidities, health-related quality of life and survival. Telomere length (TL) changes after bariatric surgery have been reported, but the studies are contradictory, and analyses using state-of-the art techniques for TL measurement, such as flow-FISH, are sparse. We measured TL dynamics via flow-FISH in patients undergoing bariatric surgery and compared their TL with 105 healthy individuals. Patients with obesity who underwent bariatric surgery were included. Lymphocyte and granulocyte absolute and age-adjusted (aa) TL were analyzed by flow-FISH before (preoperative cohort, n = 45) and after surgery (follow-up cohort, n = 35) at month 5.5 ± 3.9 (mean ± standard deviation [SD]). The initial lymphocyte aaTL was significantly shorter (-0.37 kb ± 0.18 kb, P = 0.045) in patients with obesity, while the granulocyte aaTL was not different from that in the healthy comparison population (0.28 kb ± 0.17 kb, P = 0.11). The telomere dynamics after surgery showed an increase in mean TL in both lymphocytes and granulocytes of patients with a pronounced BMI loss of ≥ 10 kg/m2. We did not find any association between TL increase after surgery and age, sex or the type of procedure selected for bariatric surgery. We confirmed that patients suffering from obesity have significantly shorter lymphocyte TL using flow-FISH. Along with and dependent on the degree of weight reduction after bariatric surgery, TL significantly increased in both lymphocytes and granulocytes after a mean of 5.5 months. Our results show that bariatric surgery affects not only body weight but also biomarkers of aging, such as TL.