Title: Telomeres and Telomerase in Cancer
1Telomeres and Telomerase in Cancer
2What is a telomere?
- A telomere is the end structure of a chromosome.
- Telomeres are essential regulators of both cell
life span and chromosomal integrity.
jshay_at_mednet.swmed.edu, University of Texas,
Southwestern Medical Center
3Why do we need telomeres?
Telomerase Demo created by Dr. Donald F. Slish at
SUNY, Plattsburgh
4What is the structure of a telomere?
- All telomeres are composed of large arrays of
short guanine-rich sequences, such as those found
in mammalian cells, 5-TTAGGGG-3. (Hahn. Journal
of Clinical Oncology, vol21, no10, pp2034-2043)
5Structure of Telomere
http//www.erin.utoronto.ca/w3bio/JBC372/lecture0
6_2004/sld035.htm
6- Telomeres in embryonic cells, germ cells, and
cells that require extended regenerations are
long. - All other cells have short telomeres.
- With each cell division telomeres become
shorter, until after dozens of divisions
telomeres get lost and the cell eventually dies.
(Bodnar et al. (1998) Science 279, 349-352).
7What is Telomerase?
- In the germ line and in rapidly dividing somatic
cells, telomerase, a reverse transcriptase that
contains an RNA template, adds TTAGGG repeats to
chromosome ends. Lodish et. al. - Telomerase is detectable in the majority of
cancer cell lines and tumors.
jshay_at_mednet.swmed.edu, University of Texas,
Southwestern Medical Center
8Telomeres and Telomerase can both suppress and
cause cancer.
Telomere Loss
Telomerase Activation
Tumor Suppression Limits cell lifespan (telomeres long) Protects chromosome ends (?)
Tumor Promotion Induces genomic instability (telomeres short) Promotes immortalization
9What happens to an organism with dysfunctional
telomerase?
10Option 1 defects and aging
- Progressive defects in cells with high turnover
(immune, hematopoietic, and reproductive organs)
in knock out mice. Nature April 9, 1998 - Dyskeratosis congenita in humans premature organ
failure, cancer predisposition (Hahn 2003)
11Option 2 Nothing happens for several generations
- After five or six generations, telomere loss in
mice leads to sterility. (Greider 1997) - mice that lack telomerase activity and show short
telomeres are tumor resistant, except when the
p53 tumor suppressor protein is absent. (Blasco
2001)