On the comparative biology of mammalian telomeres: Telomere length
co-evolves with body mass, lifespan and cancer risk
Abstract
Telomeres, the short repetitive DNA sequences that cap the ends of
linear chromosomes, shorten during cell division and are implicated in
senescence in most species. Telomerase can rebuild telomeres but is
repressed in many mammals that exhibit replicative senescence,
presumably as a tumor suppression mechanism. It is therefore important
that we have an accurate understanding of the co-evolution of telomere
biology and life-history traits that has shaped the diversity of
senescence patterns across species. Gomes et al. (2011) produced a large
data set on telomere length (TL), telomerase activity, body mass and
lifespan among 57 mammal species. We re-analyzed their data using the
same phylogenetic multiple regressions and with several additional
analyses to test the robustness of findings. We found substantial
inconsistencies in our results compared to Gomes et al.’s. Consistent
with Gomes et al. we found an inverse association between TL and
lifespan. Contrary to the analyses in Gomes et al., we found a generally
robust inverse association between TL and mass, and only weak non-robust
evidence for an association between telomerase activity and mass. These
results suggest that shorter TL may have been selected for in larger and
longer-lived species–likely as a mechanism to suppress cancer. We
support this hypothesis by showing that longer telomeres predict higher
cancer risk across 22 species. Furthermore, we find that domesticated
species have longer telomeres. Our results call into question past
interpretations of the co-evolution of telomere biology and life-history
traits and stress the need for careful attention to model construction.