Violence ages children's DNA, shortens their chromosomes
Conventional wisdom says that hardship can make us old before our time.
In fact, a new study suggests that violence 
leaves long-term scars on children's bodies — not just in  bruises on 
the skin, but also altering  their DNA, causing changes that are equivalent to seven to 10 years of premature aging.
Scientists
 measured this cellular aging by studying the ends of children's 
chromosomes, called telomeres, according to Idan Shalev, lead author of a
 study in today's Molecular Psychiatry.
Telomeres
 are special DNA sequences that act like the plastic tips on shoelaces, 
which prevent the DNA in chromosomes from unraveling. They get  shorter 
each time a cell divides, until a cell can't divide anymore and it dies.
 









 


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