Telomere position effect: regulation of gene expression with progressive telomere shortening over long distances

Jérôme D. Robin(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Andrew T. Ludlow(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Kimberly Batten(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Frédérique Magdinier(Inserm), Guido Stadler(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Kathyrin R. Wagner(Kennedy Krieger Institute), Jerry W. Shay(King Abdulaziz University), Woodring E. Wright(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center)
Genes & Development
November 15, 2014
Cited by 329Open Access
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Abstract

While global chromatin conformation studies are emerging, very little is known about the chromatin conformation of human telomeres. Most studies have focused on the role of telomeres as a tumor suppressor mechanism. Here we describe how telomere length regulates gene expression long before telomeres become short enough to produce a DNA damage response (senescence). We directly mapped the interactions adjacent to specific telomere ends using a Hi-C (chromosome capture followed by high-throughput sequencing) technique modified to enrich for specific genomic regions. We demonstrate that chromosome looping brings the telomere close to genes up to 10 Mb away from the telomere when telomeres are long and that the same loci become separated when telomeres are short. Furthermore, expression array analysis reveals that many loci, including noncoding RNAs, may be regulated by telomere length. We report three genes (ISG15 [interferon-stimulated gene 15 kd], DSP [Desmoplakin], and C1S [complement component 1s subcomplement]) located at three different subtelomeric ends (1p, 6p, and 12p) whose expressions are altered with telomere length. Additionally, we confirmed by in situ analysis (3D-FISH [three-dimensional fluorescence in situ hybridization]) that chromosomal looping occurs between the loci of those genes and their respective telomere ends. We term this process TPE-OLD for "telomere position effect over long distances." Our results suggest a potential novel mechanism for how telomere shortening could contribute to aging and disease initiation/progression in human cells long before the induction of a critical DNA damage response.


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