Telomerase maintains telomere structure in normal human cells

Masutomi Kenichi(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Evan Y. Yu(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Shilagardy Khurts(Kanazawa University), Ittai Ben‐Porath(Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research), Jennifer L. Currier(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Geoffrey B. Metz(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Mary W. Brooks(Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research), Shuichi Kaneko(Kanazawa University), Murakami Seishi(Kanazawa University), James A. DeCaprio(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Robert A. Weinberg(Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research), Sheila A. Stewart(Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research), William C. Hahn(Brigham and Women's Hospital)
Kanazawa University Repository for Academic Resources (DSpace) (Kanazawa University)
March 1, 2006
Cited by 731Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

In normal human cells, telomeres shorten with successive rounds of cell division, and immortalization correlates with stabilization of telomere length. These observations suggest that human cancer cells achieve immortalization in large part through the illegitimate activation of telomerase expression. Here, we demonstrate that the rate-limiting telomerase catalytic subunit hTERT is expressed in cycling primary presenescent human fibroblasts, previously believed to lack hTERT expression and telomerase activity. Disruption of telomerase activity in normal human cells slows cell proliferation, restricts cell lifespan, and alters the maintenance of the 3′ single-stranded telomeric overhang without changing the rate of overall telomere shortening. Together, these observations support the view that telomerase and telomere structure are dynamically regulated in normal human cells and that telomere length alone is unlikely to trigger entry into replicative senescence.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis