Title: Telomerase
1Telomerase
Telomere Terminal Transferase and its Role in
Cancer
Brian R. Keppler
February 27, 2003
2The Telomere
- Found on the ends of eukaryotic chromosomes.
- Characterized by a 3-overhang of
single-stranded DNA. - Forms a T-loop with the help of specialized
proteins to protect - itself from exonuclease activity.
- Shortening of telomeres results in the loss of
genetic information - and ultimately cell death.
3DNA Replication
- Semi-conservative
- Bi-directional
- Occurs in the 5 to 3 direction only
- Leading strand is synthesized
- continuously
- Lagging strand is synthesized
- discontinuously
- - Cant replicate to entirety
- - Gradually shortens
Lodish, H. et al., Molecular Cell Biolgy, 4th
Ed., Freeman Publishing, 2000, p.461.
4Telomerase
- A specialized form of reverse transcriptase that
carries its own - internal RNA template to direct DNA
synthesis. - Elongates the lagging strand template from its
3-OH end. - Adds short, repeated, guanosine-rich sequences
to the ends of - chromosomes.
______________________________________________
RNA template sequence
Organism
Telomeric DNA sequence
H. sapien
5-T2AG3
3-UCCCAAUC T. thermophila
5-T2G4
3-AACCCCAA O. bifaria
5-T4G4
3-CCAAAACCCC A. thaliana
5-T3AG3
unidentified
E. aediculatus
5-T4G4
3-CCAAAACCCCAAAAC S. cerevisiae
5-T1-6GTG2-3
3-CACACACCCACACCAC
5Proposed Rough Model of Telomerase
Alberts, B. et al., Molecular Biology of the
Cell, 4th Ed., Garland Science, 2002, p. 264.
6Mechanism of Telomerase Action
Lodish, H. et al., Molecular Cell Biolgy, 4th
Ed., Freeman Publishing, 2000, p.466.
7Telomerase and Cancer
- Telomerase is up-regulated in the vast majority
of human cancers and - serves to halt the progressive telomere
shortening that ultimately blocks - would-be cancer cells from achieving a full
malignant phenotype.
- Telomerase is active in the germ line and in
renewable cells (e.g. bone - marrow).
- Most human somatic cells lack telomerase
activity. - Telomere shortening
- Senescence
- End-to-end chromosome fusion and cell death
- Most tumors regain the ability to produce
telomerase. - - Cells become immortal
Artandi, SE et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2002
May 28
8How Do Cancer Cells Activate Telomerase Activity?
- Some cancer cells with telomerase activity arise
from mutant precursor - cells that have avoided telomere shortening.
- - These cells have never encountered a
telomeric limit to cell division.
- Telomerase can be activated after a genetic
catastrophe (e.g. p53 loss). - - Loss of checkpoint controls, uncontrolled
proliferation, accumulation - of mutations, chromosomal instability...But,
telomeres are also - shortening with each successive generation of
cells. - - The cell up-regulates telomerase expression in
order to regain - stability and survive.
Alberts, B. et al., Molecular Biology of the
Cell, 4th Ed., Garland Science, 2002, p. 1348.
9Targeting Telomerase as an Anticancer Drug
Approach
- Targeting the protein/RNA subunit
- Mouse models
- Specificity?
10Alberts, B. et al., Molecular Biology of the
Cell, 4th Ed., Garland Science, 2002, p. 264.