The Habits That Can Help You Live Longer
A conversation with Longevity Innovator and Nobel winner Elizabeth Blackburn
(Advances in science and public health are increasing longevity and enhancing the quality of life for people around the world. In this series of interviews with the Milken Institute Center for the Future of Aging, 14 visionaries are revealing exciting trends and insights regarding healthy longevity, sharing their vision for a better future. The Longevity Innovators interviews highlight new discoveries in biomedical and psychosocial science, as well as strategies to promote prevention and wellness for older adults. This is the seventh in the series.)
Elizabeth Blackburn, president emerita of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, is one of only 12 women to have won a Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine. She was honored for her co-discovery of telomerase, the enzyme that replenishes the telomere, an area of the chromosome related to the process of aging. In this interview with the Milken Institute Center for the Future of Aging, Blackburn —the Next Avenue Influencer of the Year in 2017 — emphasizes the importance of maintaining healthy habits, why telomeres are essential for healthier lives and how stress can be a positive experience.
Milken Institute Center for the Future of Aging: Can you explain what a telomere is and its role in our living longer, healthier lives?
Elizabeth Blackburn: Telomeres are like the protective caps on the ends of shoelaces. They prevent the ends of a shoelace — a metaphor for a chromosome — from fraying, which chromosomes often do as cells divide. Telomeres absorb the wear and tear themselves, and so each time the cell divides, these telomeres often become a little shorter. When they get too short, they signal the cell to die.
Now, we know that telomeres dynamically protect chromosome ends, so our genes stay intact and our cells continue to work well. We have come to understand that if that protection is compromised, it prevents our cells from thriving and growing properly. Unless replenished — by a special molecular mechanism called telomerase that we also discovered in my lab — the tendency of telomeres in humans is to become compromised over time.
Indeed, in humans, telomeres wear down with age and through many other influences. More and more, we understand the nuances of the balance between these opposing forces of telomere attrition and replenishment. The balance — or lack of it — affects cellular health and the entire body’s propensity for various diseases that increasingly plague humans as we age.
What’s the function of telomerase? How is it linked to healthy living?
Telomerase is the enzyme that replenishes telomeres. In humans, we now know that a proper “Goldilocks” balance of telomerase is needed. Too much telomerase action in some of our cells can tip the balance over into real risks for cancers.
So, it is imperative not to be tempted to stray into misguided over-use of, for example, unproven substances that claim to increase telomere maintenance. In contrast, we have learned — by directly studying humans — what works safely for telomere maintenance.
Luckily, there is a great deal that we individually and as a society can do to improve telomere health safely: getting enough sleep and exercise, finding and learning ways to cope with chronic psychological stressors, Mediterranean-diet-type eating habits, various forms of social improvements, unpolluted environments — they all add up.
These good influences on telomere maintenance are things that are actionable right now and do not increase cancer risks.
How can we make disease prevention a priority?
We can use our ever-increasing knowledge about the biology that underlies the slow development of these diseases — prominently, heart disease, diabetes, cancers, neurodegeneration and depression. Such diseases and conditions do not happen overnight, immediately before they are clinically diagnosed. Rather, they can take months and usually years to develop and manifest.
Thus, there are many points at which their progression can be potentially intercepted or even reversed. We can use the knowledge we have about aspects of disease biology — such as the contributions made by telomere attrition in our cells (which is only one part of the whole story) — to decide what will actually improve health and mitigate disease risks.
As an example, measuring how well telomere function is maintained can provide one objective way of assessing the effectiveness of what we can do in our lives to promote health and determine which societal policies have health impacts and which clinical and pharmacological interventions work best.
Since behavior change is hard, how can we get people, even in small doses, to see the importance of not ignoring healthy habits?
Sometimes, having an understanding of what goes on in our bodies can help.
People have repeatedly mentioned to me and other researchers that having a mental image of their telomeres wearing down actually helps them to be motivated to adopt or keep up healthier actions. (I know this is true for me, personally!) This is a fruitful area to explore for developing optimal strategies that help people expand their health-giving habits.
How can stress be seen as a positive challenge? Can you explain?
My colleague and co-author of our book, Elissa Epel, explains this research in the book.
Essentially, it means when you think: “I can take this on.” It means you can learn to get yourself into the habit of reframing your responses to stressful things as challenges, rather than as simply threats over which you will have no control.
It is not denying or minimizing the reality of the stresses, but presenting them to yourself in a different way, so that you can respond in ways that, interestingly, have been associated with better telomere maintenance (among other benefits).