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Vol. 13, No. 18, pp. 2353-2359, September 15, 1999
1 National Centre of Biotechnology, Madrid E-28049, Spain; 2 Swiss Institute for Experimental Cancer Research (ISREC), 1066 Epalinges, Switzerland
Telomeres are in the spotlight of modern biology.
Whether the subject at hand is cancer, gene regulation, organismal
aging, or the cloning of mammals, much seems to depend on what happens at the ends of chromosomes. Because glamorous hypotheses often persist
without experimental support, it is important to ask ourselves what we
really know about telomeres. This was the topic of a recent meeting
entitled `Telomeres and telomerase: cancer, aging, and genetic
instability,' held at the Juan March Centre for International Meetings
on Biology (Madrid). Leading scientists in the field of telomere
biology presented their latest data in an intimate and friendly
setting, as summarized below.
The length of the repetitive DNA that forms the basis of the
telomeric cap varies among species, cell types and chromosomes, and may
also vary with the age of a given cell. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the average telomere length of 350 ± 50 bp is
maintained by the balance between the opposing activities of telomerase
and telomere-shortening processes, such as the mechanisms of
lagging-strand synthesis and, possibly, an exonuclease activity
(Wellinger et al. 1996 The Gilson laboratory has made several new observations on the kinetics
of elongation by producing sudden changes in the length of a given
chromosomal end and monitoring the rate of elongation or degradation as
equilibrium is restored (Marcand et al. 1999 The laboratories of Virginia Zakian (Princeton University, USA) and
David Shore have shown that Rif1p is associated with the yeast
telomere, where it competes with the silent information regulators,
Sir3p and Sir4p, for the carboxy-terminal domain of the TG-repeat
binding protein, Rap1p (Fig. 1; Wotton and Shore 1997
![]()
Introduction
Top
Introduction
Telomere length regulation
Distinguishing telomeres from...
Aging, cancer, and mammalian...
The mouse telomerase knockout...
The telomerase complex
Passage through the nucleolus?
References
![]()
Telomere length regulation
Top
Introduction
Telomere length regulation
Distinguishing telomeres from...
Aging, cancer, and mammalian...
The mouse telomerase knockout...
The telomerase complex
Passage through the nucleolus?
References
). Work from the laboratories of David Shore
(University of Geneva, Switzerland) and Eric Gilson (Ecole Normale
Supérieure, France) has shown that the telomerase-dependent
extension of the TG-rich strand in yeast is regulated by a negative
feedback mechanism that monitors the length of the double-stranded
TG-rich repeat (Marcand et al. 1997
). More precisely, they have
demonstrated that the complement of Rap1p molecules bound to a specific
telomere end acts in cis to limit telomerase-mediated extension.
). First, it was shown that
following the FLP recombinase-mediated excision of a subtelomeric
TG-stretch, the terminal TG repeat lengthens to restore its original
length by a RAD52-independent and telomerase-dependent
mechanism (Marcand et al. 1999
). The action of telomerase requires
passage into S phase, and appears to be coupled to chromosomal
replication. Detailed kinetic studies show that the rate of elongation,
which is at most ~15 bp per generation, decreases progressively with
the increasing length of the TG repeat, whereas the rate of degradation
is constant. Together this suggests a model by which telomerase is
gradually inhibited as telomere length extends, most probably due to
the Rap1p-bound proteins, Rif1p and Rif2p (Wotton and Shore 1997
).
; Bourns et al.
1998
). Elimination of the Rif proteins results in
greatly extended telomeres, yet Shore reported that this can be
compensated by coupling these mutations with loss of another telomere
associated factor, yKu. In addition to affecting telomere length,
the yKu70/80 dimer itself helps recruit Sir proteins to subtelomeric sites, promoting the repression of nearby reporter genes
(Mishra and Shore 1999
; Martin et al. 1999
). Intriguingly, Shore now
finds that yKu70 binds the Rif1 protein as well as Sir4. Consistent
with the model that Rif1 competes for the binding of Sir proteins to
the Rap1 carboxyl terminus, the loss of telomeric position effect that
occurs in a yKu mutant can be restored by deletion of Rif1
(Mishra and Shore 1999
). With respect to length maintenance, it is
still unclear which proteins communicate between these telomeric
factors (Rif1, Rif2, Rap1, yKu, and Sir proteins) and the telomerase
complex itself. It is predicted that such proteins might limit
telomerase activity in a dose-dependent manner. Alternatively, the
folding of telomeric DNA into a higher-order structure may regulate the
accessibility to telomerase or to single-strand telomere binding
proteins that are required for in vivo telomerase action (see below).

View larger version (18K):
[in a new window]
Figure 1.
Model of a yeast telomere. The
Sir2/3/4 (green ovals) and the
Rif1/2 (red ovals) complexes compete for binding to the
Rap1 (yellow) carboxyl terminus and can also both interact with the
Ku70/80 dimer (lavender). Ku70/80 may also
bind to telomeric DNA directly. Cdc13p (gray) and Est1 (purple) may
recruit telomerase to the telomeric 3' end in S phase.
Telomere length in mammals may also be influenced by the telomeric chromatin structure. Jordi Surrallés (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain) showed that telomeres of the inactive X chromosome are consistently shorter than those of all the other chromosomes, including the active X. The inactive X chromosome is heterochromatic, hypermethylated, and contains underacetylated histones, suggesting a link between chromatin structure and the mechanism of telomere length maintenance in mammals as well.
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Distinguishing telomeres from DNA strand breaks |
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The yKu heterodimer is one of the more promiscuous members of the
telomere complex, for not only is it bound near the chromosomal end,
but it spreads along subtelomeric heterochromatin and is recruited to
sites of double-strand breaks, where it promotes nonhomologous
end-joining reactions. Recent studies reported by Susan Gasser (Swiss
Institute for Experimental Cancer Research, Switzerland) have monitored
how telomeres respond to the induction of DNA strand breaks in vivo
(Martin et al. 1999
). Surprisingly, a single double-strand DNA break is
sufficient to elicit a Rad9/Mec1-dependent checkpoint
response that not only arrests cell cycle progression, but provokes a
major relocalization of telomere-bound factors to this site of damage
(Martin et al. 1999
; Mills et al. 1999
). The yeast Ku complex, and the
subtelomeric heterochromatin proteins Sir2, 3, and 4, and Rap1 itself,
were all shown to respond to the Mec1 signaling pathway by being
displaced from the telomere and recruited to the site of repair. It
seems possible that these ATM-like kinase-mediated changes not only
promote double-strand break repair, but also may help protect telomeres
from the ligase IV-mediated religation events that occur at properly
processed double-strand breaks. Whether Sir proteins play a role in the repair of DNA damage or in the stabilization of unrepaired ends remains
a topic of intense research.
Interestingly, results presented at this meeting suggest that the
protection of telomeres from end-to-end fusion not only depends on
telomere binding proteins, but may also involve an unusual DNA
structure that was seen to form at mammalian telomeres. Titia de Lange
(Rockefeller University, USA) and Jack Griffiths (University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA) have shown by cross-linking and
electron microscopy that the extreme ends of human chromosomes are
tucked into the double-strand repeat forming a loop, which may serve to
protect the sensitive 3' overhang of telomeric DNA (Griffith et al.
1999
). De Lange presented a model in which the local displacement of
the TG-rich strand internally is stabilized by the telomeric protein
TRF2, whereas the rest of the normal duplex telomeric DNA is also bound
by the closely related protein TRF1 (Fig. 2). This
TG-strand invasion model not only protects the chromosomal end from
ligation complexes and end-to-end fusions but could serve as an
alternative means to elongate telomeric repeat DNA. Although such
events have not yet been documented, it is conceivable that the
invasion of the double-strand repeat by the single-stranded tail
provides a 3'OH for elongation of the tail by a leading-strand DNA
polymerase, obviating the need for telomerase activity. Whether this
occurs under normal growth conditions, in telomerase-deficient cells,
or not at all, remains to be seen. In any case, the fact that telomere
length maintenance is absolutely critical to cell survival makes it
likely that nature has invented multiple mechanisms to maintain the
ends of chromsomes.
|
Another remarkable mechanism of chromosome end maintenance is found in
Drosophila, where retrotransposons target and maintain the
chromosomal end. Although Drosophila telomeres appear to be structurally very different from most other eukaryotic telomeres, they
must share some telomere functions, most notably the protection from
end-to-end fusion. Maurizio Gatti (Universitá di Roma, Italy), reported the isolation of a large collection of Drosophila
mutants that promote telomere fusions, resulting in polycentric linear and ring chromosomes. Some of the observed fusions are very tight and
are maintained during anaphase, whereas others can be resolved. Surprisingly, two of the genes identified to date encode enzymes of the
ubiquitin pathway (Cenci et al. 1997
). In view of the conserved nature
of ubiquitin, it was proposed that a similar family of enzymes will be
important for proper telomeric function in yeast and/or mammals.
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Aging, cancer, and mammalian telomeres |
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Although the above studies attempt to unravel the molecular
mechanisms underlying normal telomere regulation, others have examined
the dynamics of telomere length in cellular and organismal aging, and
in cancerogenesis. Peter Lansdorp (Terry Fox Laboratory, Canada)
reported that the rate of telomere shortening with increasing population doublings in cultured human fibroblasts varies between individual telomeres (ranging from 150 to 50 bp/cell
division). Interestingly, those telomeres that are shorter initially,
such as telomere 17p in humans (Martens et al. 1998
), are not
necessarily the first ones to be lost. Indeed, the shortening of
telomeres 22p, 1p, and 5p, but not that of 17p, shows a statistically
significant correlation with the induction of cellular senescence.
These determinations are essential for understanding the role of
telomeres in cancer and aging. It is not yet clear whether chromosomal
instability is triggered by any telomere that reaches a critical
length, or whether specific ends play specific roles in these events.
Calvin Harley (Geron Corp., USA) and Jerry Shay (University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center, USA) described telomere dynamics in human
cells that had been immortalized by a forced activation of the
telomerase RNP. The reactivation of telomerase in normal adult cells
has been envisioned as a way of extending their life spans for
therapeutic purposes, notably for diseases associated with aging
(Bodnar et al. 1998
). Harley proposed that reactivation of telomerase
will provide a means to `refresh' telomeres in adult somatic cells,
prior to mammalian cloning and in vitro tissue production. In this
regard, both Harley and Shay mentioned that different cell types
stabilized telomeres at different lengths upon the introduction of
telomerase. Interestingly, Shay showed that the introduction of
telomerase into fibroblast cells from patients with inherited syndromes
such as Xeroderma Pigmentosum (XP), Bloom's syndrome (BS), Robert's
syndrome, Werner syndrome and Hutchinson-Gillford progeria,
immortalized the cells but did not necessarily ablate their phenotypic
lesion. Thus, `telomerized' XP cells were still UV sensitive and
cells derived from BS patients still had increased sister chromatid
exchanges. This suggests that introducing telomerase into cells from
patients with various genetic disorders may separate the underlying
genetic lesions from those that may be produced by progressive telomere
shortening due to normal fibroblast cell culture.
Studies on telomere shortening in mammals also raise the question of how telomerase is regulated during normal development, and what kind of genetic changes lead to its activation in tumors. The understanding of telomerase regulation is still very limited, but some regulators are being identified. Silvia Bacchetti (McMaster University, Canada) provided evidence that estrogen can stimulate hTERT (human telomerase reverse transcriptase) expression in normal ovary epithelial cells by activating the hTERT promoter. Robert Newbold (Uxbridge, UK) reported the mapping of a region on human chromosome 3, that when transduced into the breast cancer cell line 21NT represses telomerase and induces senescence. This study therefore argues for the existence of repressors in normal somatic cells that down-regulate telomerase.
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The mouse telomerase knockout model |
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It is clear that mastering telomere biology will have a significant
impact on human health care. First, telomerase is activated in >90%
of all types of tumors and has been proposed to be a potential target
of chemotherapy. Second, genetic diseases that provoke premature aging
show an accelerated rate of telomere shortening. Related to the dual
problem of aging and cancer, Ronald DePinho (Dana Farber Cancer
Institute, USA) described mice defective for both telomerase,
mTER
/
(mice deficient for the
mouse telomerase RNA; Blasco et al.
1997
) and tumor suppressor protein p16/p19ARF
or p53, respectively. Double knockout mice
mTER
/
/(p16/p19ARF)
/
from late generation that had short telomeres showed a 50% reduction in the number of tumors that developed as compared with
(p16/p19ARF)
/
mice (Greenberg et al. 1999
). This suggests that even though short
telomeres and the absence of telomerase do not prevent tumorigenesis in
the mouse (see also Blasco et al. 1997
; Rudolph et al. 1999
), the
presence of telomerase seems to promote tumor progression, presumably by preventing further telomere shortening. This supports the
idea that anti-telomerase chemotherapy may help to impede tumor
growth. Data from the double knockout
mTER
/
/p53
/
,
revealed that the absence of the p53 protein delays the appearance of
phenotypes associated with telomerase deficiency, presumably due to an
initial decrease in apoptosis mediated by p53 (Chin et al. 1999
).
Indeed, Titia de Lange had shown previously that loss of telomeric
function in TRF2 mutants induces apoptosis mediated by p53 and ATM
proteins (Karlseder et al. 1999
).
Exciting new data were also presented regarding the importance of
telomerase and telomeres for aging. Ronald DePinho showed that the
telomerase knockout mice, mTER
/
, show
defects associated with aging after the mice reach an old age (>18
months) (Rudolph et al. 1999
). María Blasco (National Centre of
Biotechnology, Spain) further reported that the telomerase deficiency
has an even stronger impact on life span if the mTER-null mutation is
in a genetic background with shorter telomeres (Herrera et al. 1999
).
From Blasco's and DePinho's work it seems clear that the consequences
of telomere shortening occur in tissues that have high proliferation
rates, such as organs of the hematopoietic system and the gut. One
would predict that telomere shortening with age in humans could trigger
similar pathological states. In particular, Blasco showed that the
immune system of late-generation telomerase-deficient mice is greatly
affected. These mice show splenic atrophy, abnormal hematology, an
impaired reaction of B and T cells to mitogen stimulation as well as a
defective germinal center reaction following antigen immunization, all
landmarks of immunosenescence.
To explain tumor growth in mTER
/
mice
that at the same time show severe proliferative dissorders we need to
invoke the activation of telomerase-independent telomere elongation in
some cells. In this regard, Blasco presented data showing that
telomerase-independent elongation mechanisms could be operating in the
hematopoietic organs of late generation telomerase-deficient mice. In
particular, telomeres are elongated in late generation
mTER
/
mice during the high
proliferation that B cells undergo at the splenic germinal centers
during the immune response. The study of mice that are deficient both
for telomerase activity and DNA repair or recombination proteins could
help to identify the nature of proteins involved in
telomerase-independent telomere maintenance.
In this regard, Roger Reddel (Children's Medical Research Institute,
Australia) presented an update on human cells that maintain telomeres
without telomerase (ALT cells) (Bryan et al. 1995
, 1997
). Experimental
evidence from yeast suggests that the ALT mechanism in human cells
could be recombinational, so that telomeres are extended using existing
telomeres as template. Alternatively, as mentioned above, the existence
of T loops raises the possibility that a telomere might be able to use
itself rather than another telomere as template. Reddel reported that
5%-10% of ALT interphase nuclei exhibit an apparently unique form of
promyelocytic leukemia (PML) body. (PML bodies are nuclear structures
and are so-named because they contain PML protein, which derives its
name from the observation that in PML this protein is often fused to
another protein due to a chromosomal translocation). In ALT cells the PML bodies contain telomeric DNA, the telomeric proteins TRF1 and TRF2,
as well as the recombination proteins Rad51 and Rad52. Whether this
type of PML body indicates the occurrence of telomeric recombination
mediated by T loops remains to be determined.
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The telomerase complex |
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It has been known for over a decade that telomerase functions as a
reverse transcriptase (RT) (Greider and Blackburn 1989
; Yu et al.
1990
). A tightly associated RNA subunit (TER) provides the template for
telomeric repeat synthesis, and the active site of the protein subunit
shares sequence features with RTs of retroviruses and retroements
(Lingner et al. 1997b
; Nakamura and Cech 1998
). Although the catalytic
subunit of telomerase, TERT shares the hallmarks of other RTs, it forms
a novel subgroup in this protein family and has distinct sequence
features. From the biochemical point of view, TERT has some properties
that distinguish it from classical RTs. Using the 3' OH at the DNA
terminus as a primer, telomerase copies repeatedly only a very
restricted region of the telomerase RNA component, the so-called
template region. This repeated reverse transcription of the template
region can occur in a more or less processive manner in vitro,
depending on the source of the enzyme and the reaction conditions
employed (Morin 1989
; Greider 1991
; Lee and Blackburn 1993
; Prowse et
al. 1993
; Hammond and Cech 1997
).
To reveal how the primary sequence features that are unique to TERT
relate to its function, Tracy Bryan (University of Colorado-Boulder, USA) dissected the differences between TERTs and classical RTs using a
site-directed mutagenesis approach. When a TERT-conserved leucine
residue was changed to the retroviral RT-conserved tyrosine residue
near the active site aspartates, the processivity of reticulocyte lysate-translated Tetrahymena TERT was increased and thus
resembled more a classical RT in that respect. Using hTERT and the
reticulocyte system (Weinrich et al. 1997
), Lea Harrington (Amgen
Institute/University of Toronto, Canada) determined to
what extent domains outside the RT domain of TERT are required for
reconstitution and telomerase activity. In this system, the RT domain
was not sufficient to reconstitute activity, indicating that the TERT
regions outside the RT domain are essential for activity.
Are TERT and telomerase RNA sufficient for reconstitution of activity?
Interestingly, Shay reported the requirement of two chaperone proteins
that are present in the reticulocyte lysate and that are required to
reconstitute activity from hTERT and hTER in this system (Holt et al.
1999
). Kathleen Collins (University of California-Berkeley, USA) also
found that a reticulocyte lysate component is required to reconstitute
telomerase activity from in vitro transcribed Tetrahymena TERT
and telomerase RNA (Licht and Collins 1999
).
The telomerase RNA moiety of ciliates has a length of 160-200
nucleotides and a phylogenetically conserved secondary structure (Romero and Blackburn 1991
; Lingner et al. 1994
; McCormick-Graham and
Romero 1995
). Recently, a pseudoknot structure conserved in the ciliate
telomerase RNA was found to be necessary for in vivo assembly with
TERT, thus being the first structural element of telomerase RNA with a
clearly assigned function (Gilley and Blackburn 1999
). In mammals and
yeast, the telomerase RNAs are much longer
450 and 1300 nucleotides,
respectively (Singer and Gottschling 1994
; Blasco et al. 1995
; Feng et
al. 1995
)
and it is unclear which structural elements may be
universally conserved. As a step toward analyzing the human telomerase
RNA hTER, both Shay and Harrington reported a deletion analysis of this
molecule. Functionality was tested in vitro, in the reticulocyte
transcription/translation system in which hTERT is
expressed and telomerase activity is reconstituted with hTER (Weinrich
et al. 1997
). Regions upstream of the hTER template were found to be
mostly dispensable for reconstituting activity. However, downstream of
the template the RNA contains domains critical for activity
and/or assembly. Shay also reported that separate hTER
fragments (+33 to +147 and +164 to +325) that are not functional for
reconstitution by themselves, function to reconstitute activity when
combined in trans (Tesmer et al. 1999
).
New data were also presented regarding the mutation of protein
telomerase components in mice. Harrington presented the
characterization of the knockouts of mTERT, the catalytic subunit of
mouse telomerase (Greenberg et al. 1998
; Martín-Rivera et al.
1998
), and TEP1, a telomerase-associated protein that binds the
telomerase RNA (Harrington et al. 1997a
; Nakayama et al. 1997
). The
mTERT
/
embryonic stem cells lack
telomerase activity and show telomere shortening with increasing
passage in culture, as expected from a knockout in an essential
component of telomerase. Surprisingly, TEP1 knockouts show normal
levels of telomerase activity and do not show telomeric shortening,
suggesting that TEP1 is not required for telomerase activity nor
telomere maintenance in vivo. Interestingly, TEP1 is a component of the
vault complex (V. Kickhoefer and L. Rome pers. comm.), a large 13-MD
ribonucleoprotein particle of unknown function (Kong et al. 1999
). The
significance of this finding for telomerase and telomere biology
remains to be seen.
Telomere maintenance in S. cerevisiae requires not only the
telomerase catalytic subunit Est2p and the telomerase RNA TLC1, but
also several other telomerase-associated proteins. Vicki Lundblad (Baylor College of Medicine, USA) reported further analysis of the
EST (ever shorter
telomere) gene products (Lundblad and Szostak 1989
; Lendvay
et al. 1996
). Est1p and Est3p are known to be required for telomere
maintenance in vivo but not for telomerase activity in vitro (Cohn and
Blackburn 1995
; Lingner et al. 1997a
). Est1p, Est2p, and Est3p are
associated with the telomerase RNA moiety TLC1 as shown by
immunoprecipitation experiments (Lin and Zakian 1995
; Steiner et al.
1996
; Lingner et al. 1997a
). Apart from Est1p being a component of the
telomerase complex, it is also a prime candidate for mediating its
interaction with the very 3' tip of the chromosome (see Fig. 1).
Est1p has single-stranded telomeric DNA-binding activity and requires a
single-stranded 3' end for binding (Virta-Pearlman et al. 1996
).
Another putative single-stranded telomere binding protein, Cdc13p, may
bind to the telomeric 3' overhang more internally (Lin and Zakian
1996
; Nugent et al. 1996
). The concentration of telomerase in vivo and
its affinity for telomeric DNA may not be sufficient to allow efficient
telomere elongation in the absence of Est1p or Cdc13p. On the other
hand, if telomere T loops occur in yeast, Cdc13p and Est1p may also
have a role in preventing the formation of such a structure during
telomere elongation in S phase, thus maintaining telomeric DNA in a
telomerase competent state. To understand telomere length regulation,
it will be important to elucidate when and how the binding of the single-stranded telomere binding proteins and/or telomerase is regulated.
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Passage through the nucleolus? |
|---|
|
|
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The identification of a structural element in a nonciliate
telomerase RNA was reported by Kathleen Collins (Mitchell et al. 1999
).
An H/ACA type motif is present at the 3' end of human
telomerase RNA. This element is typically found in small nucleolar RNAs
(snoRNAs) that assemble into small ribonucleolar protein (snRNP)
particles that guide the pseudouridylation of rRNA precursors
(Weinstein and Steitz 1999
). The function of the H/ACA
motif in human telomerase RNA is unclear. It would be unexpected but
possible that the H/ACA motif of the telomerase RNA would
guide pseudouridylation of itself or another RNA, as do its related
snoRNPs. On the other hand, the H/ACA motif may have been
borrowed by telomerase for biogenesis or stability purposes. It was
noted by Joachim Lingner (Swiss Institute for Experimental Cancer
Research, Switzerland), however, that hTERT is not predominantly
nucleolar but is found in numerous nucleoplasmic foci (Harrington et
al. 1997b
; Martín-Rivera et al. 1998
) when analyzed in
tumor-derived telomerase-positive cells or in cells in which hTERT was
expressed ectopically. The TERT-containing foci are of unknown
identity, yet do not colocalize with the splicing factor SC35. A
transient association with the nucleolus during human telomerase
maturation, however, seems plausible given the presence of the
H/ACA motif. Similarly, snoRNPs themselves do not have a
constitutive nucleolar localization but are thought to pass through the
nucleolus during maturation (Pederson 1998
).
The subnuclear localization of the yeast TERT Est2p was also examined, using the direct epifluorescence of a functional Est2p-GFP fusion (Joachim Lingner). Rather than colocalizing with the discrete perinuclear foci of yeast telomeres, the fusion protein was found weakly distributed through the nucleoplasm and enriched in the nucleolus. Because the yeast telomerase RNA TLC1 has no apparent H/ACA motif, Est2p appears to associate with the nucleolus by other means. It has not been excluded, however, that TLC1 also passes through the nucleolus, perhaps acquiring modifications that allow efficient assembly with the protein moiety.
From the 3 days in Madrid and our report here it should become clearer than ever before that genetic, cytological, and biochemical studies in yeast and mammals alike provide a powerful and fruitful means to unravel how the eukaryotic cell produces and maintains its chromosomal ends. The ambitious goals of workers in this young, but very dynamic field, promise new and exciting findings in the near future.
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Acknowledgments |
|---|
We thank all the speakers at the meeting for sharing their data and the reviewers for their helpful comments.
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Footnotes |
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3 Corresponding author.
E-MAIL mblasco{at}cnb.uam.es; FAX 34-91-372-0493.
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References |
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Origin of telomerase.
Cell
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G. Cimino-Reale, E. Pascale, E. Battiloro, G. Starace, R. Verna, and E. D'Ambrosio The length of telomeric G-rich strand 3'-overhang measured by oligonucleotide ligation assay Nucleic Acids Res., April 1, 2001; 29(7): e35 - e35. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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T. Kahn |