Last year is the year of telomere. The Nobel Prize in
physiology or medicine 2009 was awarded to Elizabeth Blackburn, Carol Greider,
and Jack Szostak for their seminal discovery of telomere and telomerase.
Telomere is a compact DNA-protein structure at the end of chromosome, comprised
of TTAGGG repeats in humans and proteins associated with the telomeric
sequence. When DNA replication starts, both strands of DNA are synthesized in
opposite directions. The leading strand moves continuously, while the lagging
strand is generated discontinuously. There is a need of a RNA primer, known as
Okazaki fragment, to initiate telomere synthesis on lagging strand. The primer
has an intrinsic nature of being degraded, resulting in a loss of some
repetitive telomere sequence after the completion of each round of DNA
replication. Telomere is one of the key determinants of lifespan, and telomere
erosion to a critically short stage limits replicative lifespan of cultured
cells, a phenomenon known as Hayflick limit or replicative senescence [1].Nonetheless, telomere length is not the
only contributor to replicative senescence. The length and structure of telomere
are tightly controlled by many telomere-associated proteins, mutations in some
of which result in premature aging syndromes. In particular, the WRN gene
is mutated in Werner syndrome, characterized by accelerated aging phenotypes
after puberty. The WRN protein exhibits helicase and exonuclease activities
that are critical for DNA metabolism by unwinding or processing DNA substrates.
WRN preferentially binds DNA structures reminiscent
of intermediates during DNA replication [2], and the WRN helicase activity
maintains telomere homeostasis only during DNA replication [3]. A previous
study showed that WRN can form a complex with DNA-PK, the key enzyme in the non-homologous
end-joining pathway of DNA double strand break repair [4]. Loss-of-function in
the catalytic activity of DNA-PK (DNA-PKcs) results in chromosome
end-to-end fusion [5]. Strikingly, mice deficient in either DNA-PKcs or
WRN alone do not show aging phenotypes unless they are under a short telomere
background. Consistent with this notion, Kusumoto-Matsuo et al. have now
identified a key link between the WRN helicase and DNA-PKcs at
telomeres for the maintenance of telomeric D-loop structure [6]. They provided
evidence that DNA-PKcs can specifically stimulate WRN helicase and prevent
telomeric D-loop from exonuclease digestion in vitro and in vivo.
Moreover, they showed that the telomere repetitive sequence, known as G-tail,
is shorter in DNA-PKcs or WRN deficient cells than in normal cells, and these
defects can be reversed by overexpressing WRN in DNA-PKcs deficient cells.
Altogether, DNA-PKcs can help WRN to unwind telomere D-loop and protect the DNA
from exonuclease actions.The desire of deciphering longevity is likely to drive
scientists to continuously explore telomere maintenance. Understanding the
cross-talks between the proteins associated with telomere will one day provide
the mechanistic basis for telomere-associated aging phenotypes. Of note, Mre11
was found to exhibit a protective role in generating 3' overhang at telomeres
to avoid triggering DNA repair mechanisms [7]. The interaction between DNA-PKcs
and WRN might act as an upstream event of telomeric D-loop processing and the
front line of telomere protection.
Authors: Parimal Karmakar; Jason Piotrowski; Robert M Brosh; Joshua A Sommers; Susan P Lees Miller; Wen-Hsing Cheng; Carey M Snowden; Dale A Ramsden; Vilhelm A Bohr Journal: J Biol Chem Date: 2002-03-11 Impact factor: 5.157
Authors: Cayetano von Kobbe; Nicolas H Thomä; Bryan K Czyzewski; Nikola P Pavletich; Vilhelm A Bohr Journal: J Biol Chem Date: 2003-10-08 Impact factor: 5.157