We determined telomere length and telomerase activity in long-lived mutants and wild-type strains of Caenorhabditis elegans. Telomere length had good correlation with the life-span in strains tested. Telomere length was increased in strains showing extended life span (
daf-2 and daf 2:
daf-12) relative to a wild-type strain with normal life span (Bristol-N2, DRM stock). A double mutant (
daf-2:
daf-16) of normal life span has a telomere length intermediate between wild type Bristol-N2 and the long-lived
daf-2 mutant. Telomerase activity, however, was not detected in any adult worms and does not differ significantly in embryos among these strains. Endonuclease activity was found to be elevated in some of these strains compared to wild-type Bristol-N2 worms. Since the adult nematode is essentially post-mitotic apart from germline, we speculate that the observed correlation between longevity and telomere length might reflect differences persisting from the developmental period. Telomeric DNA may preferentially accumulate oxidative damage, and thus act as a signaling mediator for repair mechanisms, and/or for maintenance of gene silencing via chromatin condensation.