Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8320667 | DNA Repair | 2015 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
More than 85% of all human cancers possess the ability to maintain chromosome ends, or telomeres, by virtue of telomerase activity. Loss of functional telomeres is incompatible with survival, and telomerase inhibition has been established in several model systems to be a tractable target for cancer therapy. As human tumour cells typically maintain short equilibrium telomere lengths, we wondered if enforced telomere elongation would positively or negatively impact cell survival. We found that telomere elongation beyond a certain length significantly decreased cell clonogenic survival after gamma irradiation. Susceptibility to irradiation was dosage-dependent and increased at telomere lengths exceeding 17Â kbp despite the fact that all chromosome ends retained telomeric DNA. These data suggest that an optimal telomere length may promote human cancer cell survival in the presence of genotoxic stress.
Keywords
human telomerase RNAPDLSV40double-stranded DNA breakQ-FISHDSBTRFSFEALTHTRCStDNA damageTERTanalysis of varianceANOVATelomerase reverse transcriptaseTelomeraseTelomerespopulation doubling levelHuman tumour cellsAlternative lengthening of telomerestelomere restriction fragmentSimian virus 40Gamma irradiationplating efficiencysurvival fraction
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Biochemistry
Authors
Jennifer Fairlie, Lea Harrington,