Author/Authors :
Robert F. Wynn، نويسنده , , Michael A Cross، نويسنده , , Claire Hatton، نويسنده , , Andrew M Will، نويسنده , , Linda S Lashford، نويسنده , , T Michael Dexter، نويسنده , , Nydia G. Testa، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background
The establishment of donor-derived haemopoiesis in the recipients of allogeneic bone-marrow transplants (BMT) involves extensive proliferation of haemopoietic stem cells. The biological consequences of this replicative stress are ill defined, but any “ageing” effect would carry the risk of an increased frequency of clonal disorders during later life. We compared blood-cell mean telomere lengths in donor/recipient pairs.
Methods
Mean telomere length was calculated by in-gel hybridisation to leucocyte DNA from 56 normal individuals aged 0–96 years, and from 14 consecutive BMT recipients (aged 2–14 years) plus their respective donors (aged 2–46 years). Engraftment was confirmed by variable numbers of tandem repeats (VNTR) or gender analysis.
Findings
On average, blood-cell telomeres of transplant recipients were 0•4 kb (95% CI -0•2 to -0•6) shorter than those of their respective donors. This degree of telomere loss is equivalent to a median of 15 yearsʹ (range 0–40) ageing in the healthy controls.
Interpretation
The kinetics of haemopoietic engraftment impose replicative stress on the haemopoietic stem cells, resulting in a pronounced ageing effect, which may be sufficient to accelerate the onset of clonal haemopoietic disorders usually associated with later life. Monitoring of haemopoietic status in BMT recipients as time since BMT increases will be important. Assessment of transplant protocols under development in terms of their effects on telomere shortening is also indicated.