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Dive into the research topics where Lynn Cherkas is active.

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Featured researches published by Lynn Cherkas.


The Lancet | 2005

Obesity, cigarette smoking, and telomere length in women

Ana M. Valdes; Toby Andrew; Jeffrey P. Gardner; Masayuki Kimura; E Oelsner; Lynn Cherkas; Abraham Aviv; Tim D. Spector

Obesity and smoking are important risk factors for many age-related diseases. Both are states of heightened oxidative stress, which increases the rate of telomere erosion per replication, and inflammation, which enhances white blood cell turnover. Together, these processes might accelerate telomere erosion with age. We therefore tested the hypothesis that increased body mass and smoking are associated with shortened telomere length in white blood cells. We investigated 1122 white women aged 18-76 years and found that telomere length decreased steadily with age at a mean rate of 27 bp per year. Telomeres of obese women were 240 bp shorter than those of lean women (p=0.026). A dose-dependent relation with smoking was recorded (p=0.017), and each pack-year smoked was equivalent to an additional 5 bp of telomere length lost (18%) compared with the rate in the overall cohort. Our results emphasise the pro-ageing effects of obesity and cigarette smoking.


JAMA Internal Medicine | 2008

The association between physical activity in leisure time and leukocyte telomere length

Lynn Cherkas; Janice L Hunkin; Bernet Kato; J. Brent Richards; Jeffrey P. Gardner; Gabriela Surdulescu; Masayuki Kimura; Xiaobin Lu; Tim D. Spector; Abraham Aviv

BACKGROUND Physical inactivity is an important risk factor for many aging-related diseases. Leukocyte telomere dynamics (telomere length and age-dependent attrition rate) are ostensibly a biological indicator of human aging. We therefore tested the hypothesis that physical activity level in leisure time (over the past 12 months) is associated with leukocyte telomere length (LTL) in normal healthy volunteers. METHODS We studied 2401 white twin volunteers, comprising 2152 women and 249 men, with questionnaires on physical activity level, smoking status, and socioeconomic status. Leukocyte telomere length was derived from the mean terminal restriction fragment length and adjusted for age and other potential confounders. RESULTS Leukocyte telomere length was positively associated with increasing physical activity level in leisure time (P< .001); this association remained significant after adjustment for age, sex, body mass index, smoking, socioeconomic status, and physical activity at work. The LTLs of the most active subjects were 200 nucleotides longer than those of the least active subjects (7.1 and 6.9 kilobases, respectively; P= .006). This finding was confirmed in a small group of twin pairs discordant for physical activity level (on average, the LTL of more active twins was 88 nucleotides longer than that of less active twins; P= .03). CONCLUSIONS A sedentary lifestyle (in addition to smoking, high body mass index, and low socioeconomic status) has an effect on LTL and may accelerate the aging process. This provides a powerful message that could be used by clinicians to promote the potentially antiaging effect of regular exercise.


Aging Cell | 2006

The effects of social status on biological aging as measured by white-blood-cell telomere length

Lynn Cherkas; Abraham Aviv; Ana M. Valdes; J. L. Hunkin; Jeffrey P. Gardner; Gabriela Surdulescu; Masayuki Kimura; Tim D. Spector

Low socio‐economic status (SES) is associated with a shortened life expectancy, but its effect on aging is unknown. The rate of white‐blood‐cell (WBC) telomere attrition may be a biological indicator of human aging. We tested the hypothesis that SES is associated with telomere attrition independent of known risk factors influencing the aging process. We studied 1552 female twins. A venous blood sample was taken from each twin and isolated WBCs used for extraction of DNA. Terminal restriction fragment length (TRFL) was measured. Questionnaire data were collected on occupation, education, income, smoking, exercise, height and weight. Standard multiple linear regression and multivariate analyses of variance tested for associations between SES and TRFL, adjusting for covariates. A discordant twin analysis was conducted on a subset to verify findings. WBC telomere length was highly variable but significantly shorter in lower SES groups. The mean difference in TRFL between nonmanual and manual SES groups was 163.2 base pairs (bp) of which 22.9 bp (∼14%) was accounted for by body mass index, smoking and exercise. Comparison of TRFL in the 17 most discordant SES twin pairs confirmed this difference. Low SES, in addition to the harmful effects of smoking, obesity and lack of exercise, appears to have an impact on telomere length.


Twin Research | 2003

Genetic and environmental influences on migraine: a twin study across six countries.

E.J.C.M. Mulder; Caroline van Baal; David Gaist; Mikko Kallela; Jaakko Kaprio; Dan A. Svensson; Dale R. Nyholt; Nicholas G. Martin; Alex J. MacGregor; Lynn Cherkas; Dorret I. Boomsma; Aarno Palotie

Migraine is a common neurovascular brain disorder that is manifested in recurrent episodes of disabling headache. The aim of the present study was to compare the prevalence and heritability of migraine across six of the countries that participate in GenomEUtwin project including a total number of 29,717 twin pairs. Migraine was assessed by questionnaires that differed between most countries. It was most prevalent in Danish and Dutch females (32% and 34%, respectively), whereas the lowest prevalence was found in the younger and older Finnish cohorts (13% and 10%, respectively). The estimated genetic variance (heritability) was significant and the same between sexes in all countries. Heritability ranged from 34% to 57%, with lowest estimates in Australia, and highest estimates in the older cohort of Finland, the Netherlands, and Denmark. There was some indication that part of the genetic variance was non-additive, but this was significant in Sweden only. In addition to genetic factors, environmental effects that are non-shared between members of a twin pair contributed to the liability of migraine. After migraine definitions are homogenized among the participating countries, the GenomEUtwin project will provide a powerful resource to identify the genes involved in migraine.


Management Science | 2008

Is the Tendency to Engage in Entrepreneurship Genetic

Nicos Nicolaou; Scott Shane; Lynn Cherkas; Janice L Hunkin; Tim D. Spector

We used quantitative genetics techniques to compare the entrepreneurial activity of 870 pairs of monozygotic (MZ) and 857 pairs of same-sex dizygotic (DZ) twins from the United Kingdom. We ran model-fitting analyses to estimate the genetic, shared environmental and nonshared environmental effects on the propensity of people to become entrepreneurs. We found relatively high heritabilities for entrepreneurship across different operationalizations of the phenomenon, with little effect of family environment and upbringing. Our findings suggest the importance of considering genetic factors in explanations for why people engage in entrepreneurial activity.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Meta-analysis of genome-wide association data identifies two loci influencing age at menarche.

John Perry; Lisette Stolk; Nora Franceschini; Kathryn L. Lunetta; Guangju Zhai; Patrick F. McArdle; Albert V. Smith; Thor Aspelund; Stefania Bandinelli; Eric Boerwinkle; Lynn Cherkas; Gudny Eiriksdottir; Karol Estrada; Luigi Ferrucci; Aaron R. Folsom; Melissa Garcia; Vilmundur Gudnason; Albert Hofman; David Karasik; Douglas P. Kiel; Lenore J. Launer; Joyce B. J. van Meurs; Michael A. Nalls; Fernando Rivadeneira; Alan R. Shuldiner; Andrew Singleton; Nicole Soranzo; Toshiko Tanaka; Jenny A. Visser; Michael N. Weedon

We conducted a meta-analysis of genome-wide association data to detect genes influencing age at menarche in 17,510 women. The strongest signal was at 9q31.2 (P = 1.7 × 10−9), where the nearest genes include TMEM38B, FKTN, FSD1L, TAL2 and ZNF462. The next best signal was near the LIN28B gene (rs7759938; P = 7.0 × 10−9), which also influences adult height. We provide the first evidence for common genetic variants influencing female sexual maturation.


Nature Genetics | 2013

Genome-wide meta-analysis identifies new susceptibility loci for migraine

Verneri Anttila; Bendik S. Winsvold; Padhraig Gormley; Tobias Kurth; Francesco Bettella; George McMahon; Mikko Kallela; Rainer Malik; Boukje de Vries; Gisela M. Terwindt; Sarah E. Medland; Unda Todt; Wendy L. McArdle; Lydia Quaye; Markku Koiranen; M. Arfan Ikram; Terho Lehtimäki; Anine H. Stam; Lannie Ligthart; Juho Wedenoja; Ian Dunham; Benjamin M. Neale; Priit Palta; Eija Hämäläinen; Markus Schuerks; Lynda M. Rose; Julie E. Buring; Paul M. Ridker; Stacy Steinberg; Hreinn Stefansson

Migraine is the most common brain disorder, affecting approximately 14% of the adult population, but its molecular mechanisms are poorly understood. We report the results of a meta-analysis across 29 genome-wide association studies, including a total of 23,285 individuals with migraine (cases) and 95,425 population-matched controls. We identified 12 loci associated with migraine susceptibility (P < 5 × 10−8). Five loci are new: near AJAP1 at 1p36, near TSPAN2 at 1p13, within FHL5 at 6q16, within C7orf10 at 7p14 and near MMP16 at 8q21. Three of these loci were identified in disease subgroup analyses. Brain tissue expression quantitative trait locus analysis suggests potential functional candidate genes at four loci: APOA1BP, TBC1D7, FUT9, STAT6 and ATP5B.


PLOS Genetics | 2005

Offspring's Leukocyte Telomere Length, Paternal Age, and Telomere Elongation in Sperm

Masayuki Kimura; Lynn Cherkas; Bernet Kato; Serkalem Demissie; Jacob von Bornemann Hjelmborg; Michael Brimacombe; Adrienne Cupples; Janice L Hunkin; Jefferey P Gardner; Xiaobin Lu; Xiaojian Cao; Malinee Sastrasinh; Michael A. Province; Steven C. Hunt; Kaare Christensen; Daniel Levy; Tim D. Spector; Abraham Aviv

Leukocyte telomere length (LTL) is a complex genetic trait. It shortens with age and is associated with a host of aging-related disorders. Recent studies have observed that offspring of older fathers have longer LTLs. We explored the relation between paternal age and offsprings LTLs in 4 different cohorts. Moreover, we examined the potential cause of the paternal age on offsprings LTL by delineating telomere parameters in sperm donors. We measured LTL by Southern blots in Caucasian men and women (n=3365), aged 18–94 years, from the Offspring of the Framingham Heart Study (Framingham Offspring), the NHLBI Family Heart Study (NHLBI-Heart), the Longitudinal Study of Aging Danish Twins (Danish Twins), and the UK Adult Twin Registry (UK Twins). Using Southern blots, Q-FISH, and flow-FISH, we also measured telomere parameters in sperm from 46 young (<30 years) and older (>50 years) donors. Paternal age had an independent effect, expressed by a longer LTL in males of the Framingham Offspring and Danish Twins, males and females of the NHLBI-Heart, and females of UK Twins. For every additional year of paternal age, LTL in offspring increased at a magnitude ranging from half to more than twice of the annual attrition in LTL with age. Moreover, sperm telomere length analyses were compatible with the emergence in older men of a subset of sperm with elongated telomeres. Paternal age exerts a considerable effect on the offsprings LTL, a phenomenon which might relate to telomere elongation in sperm from older men. The implications of this effect deserve detailed study.


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2009

Prevalence and Heritability of Compulsive Hoarding: A Twin Study

Alessandra C. Iervolino; Nader Perroud; Miguel A. Fullana; Michel Guipponi; Lynn Cherkas; David A. Collier; David Mataix-Cols

OBJECTIVE Compulsive hoarding is a serious health problem for the sufferers, their families, and the community at large. It appears to be highly prevalent and to run in families. However, this familiality could be due to genetic or environmental factors. This study examined the prevalence and heritability of compulsive hoarding in a large sample of twins. METHOD A total of 5,022 twins completed a validated measure of compulsive hoarding. The prevalence of severe hoarding was determined using empirically derived cutoffs. Genetic and environmental influences on compulsive hoarding were estimated using liability threshold models, and maximum-likelihood univariate model-fitting analyses were employed to decompose the variance in the liability to compulsive hoarding into additive genetic and shared and nonshared environmental factors (female twins only; N=4,355). RESULTS A total of 2.3% of twins met criteria for caseness, with significantly higher rates observed for male (4.1%) than for female (2.1%) twins. Model-fitting analyses in female twins showed that genetic factors accounted for approximately 50% of the variance in compulsive hoarding, with nonshared environmental factors and measurement error accounting for the other half. CONCLUSIONS Compulsive hoarding is highly prevalent and heritable, at least in women, with nonshared environmental factors also likely to play an important role.


Biology Letters | 2005

Genetic influences on variation in female orgasmic function: a twin study

Kate M. Dunn; Lynn Cherkas; Tim D. Spector

Orgasmic dysfunction in females is commonly reported in the general population with little consensus on its aetiology. We performed a classical twin study to explore whether there were observable genetic influences on female orgasmic dysfunction. Adult females from the TwinsUK register were sent a confidential survey including questions on sexual problems. Complete responses to the questions on orgasmic dysfunction were obtained from 4037 women consisting of 683 monozygotic and 714 dizygotic pairs of female twins aged between 19 and 83 years. One in three women (32%) reported never or infrequently achieving orgasm during intercourse, with a corresponding figure of 21% during masturbation. A significant genetic influence was seen with an estimated heritability for difficulty reaching orgasm during intercourse of 34% (95% confidence interval 27–40%) and 45% (95% confidence interval 38–52%) for orgasm during masturbation. These results show that the wide variation in orgasmic dysfunction in females has a genetic basis and cannot be attributed solely to cultural influences. These results should stimulate further research into the biological and perhaps evolutionary processes governing female sexual function.

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Andrea Burri

Auckland University of Technology

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Mikko Kallela

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Nicholas G. Martin

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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Nigel Trudgill

University of Birmingham

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Markus Perola

National Institute for Health and Welfare

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