# Elevated Serum Telomerase Level and Peripheral Blood hTERT Gene Expression in Patients with Stable Coronary Artery Disease

**Authors:** Caglar Ozmen, Nihal Inandiklioglu, Omer Tepe, Anıl Akray, Mustafa Gok, Imam Gunay, Abdulkadir Iltas, Pinar Ozmen Yildiz, Hatice Rahimova, Mustafa Demirtas

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/genes17030276 · 2026-02-27

## TL;DR

This study finds higher telomerase levels and hTERT gene expression in patients with stable coronary artery disease compared to healthy individuals, suggesting a link to disease severity.

## Contribution

The study is the first to show elevated telomerase and hTERT in stable CAD patients, linking them to disease severity.

## Key findings

- Serum telomerase levels were significantly higher in stable CAD patients compared to controls.
- hTERT gene expression was upregulated in patients with stable CAD.
- Increased telomerase and hTERT were independently associated with coronary vessel involvement.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Telomeres and telomerase play crucial roles in cellular aging and genome stability. Emerging evidence indicates that alterations in telomerase activity and telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) gene expression may be involved in cardiovascular pathophysiology. However, data on telomerase regulation in patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD) are limited. This study aimed to compare serum telomerase concentration and hTERT gene expression levels between patients with stable CAD and healthy controls. Methods: A total of 52 patients diagnosed with stable CAD and 50 age-matched healthy controls were enrolled prospectively. Telomerase concentrations were measured in serum samples using the ELISA method, and hTERT mRNA expression was measured in blood samples using RT-PCR. Results: Serum telomerase levels were significantly higher in patients with stable CAD compared with controls (p < 0.05). Similarly, hTERT gene expression was upregulated in the patient group (p < 0.05). Multivariable analysis showed that increased log-transformed telomerase levels (AOR: 2.12, 95% CI: 1.14–5.13, p = 0.024) and hTERT expression (AOR: 1.79, 95% CI: 1.09–3.27, p = 0.037) were independently associated with coronary vessel involvement in stable CAD. These findings indicate an increase in both telomerase level and hTERT transcriptional activity in stable CAD. Conclusions: Increased telomerase level and hTERT expression may reflect a compensatory response to chronic vascular stress and are associated with disease severity in stable CAD.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** coronary artery disease (MONDO:0005010)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** TERT (telomerase reverse transcriptase) [NCBI Gene 7015] {aka CMM9, DKCA2, DKCB4, EST2, PFBMFT1, TCS1}
- **Diseases:** CAD (MESH:D003324)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13025165/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13025165