Aaron L Moye1, Karina C Porter1, Scott B Cohen1, Tram Phan2, Katherine G Zyner1, Natsuki Sasaki1, George O Lovrecz2, Jennifer L Beck3, Tracy M Bryan1. 1. Children's Medical Research Institute, University of Sydney, 214 Hawkesbury Road, Westmead, New South Wales 2145, Australia. 2. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Manufacturing Flagship, 343 Royal Parade, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia. 3. School of Chemistry, University of Wollongong, Northfields Avenue, Wollongong, New South Wales 2522, Australia.
Abstract
It has been hypothesized that G-quadruplexes can sequester the 3' end of the telomere and prevent it from being extended by telomerase. Here we purify and characterize stable, conformationally homogenous human telomeric G-quadruplexes, and demonstrate that human telomerase is able to extend parallel, intermolecular conformations in vitro. These G-quadruplexes align correctly with the RNA template of telomerase, demonstrating that at least partial G-quadruplex resolution is required. A highly purified preparation of human telomerase retains this extension ability, establishing that the core telomerase enzyme complex is sufficient for partial G-quadruplex resolution and extension. The parallel-specific G-quadruplex ligand N-methyl mesoporphyrin IX (NMM) causes an increase in telomeric G-quadruplexes, and we show that telomerase colocalizes with a subset of telomeric G-quadruplexes in vivo. The ability of telomerase to partially unwind, extend and localize to these structures implies that parallel telomeric G-quadruplexes may play an important biological role.
It has been hypothesized that G-quadruplexes can sequester the 3' end of the telomere and prevent it from being extended by telomerase. Here we purify and characterize stable, conformationally homogenous human telomeric G-quadruplexes, and demonstrate that human telomerase is able to extend parallel, intermolecular conformations in vitro. These G-quadruplexes align correctly with the RNA template of telomerase, demonstrating that at least partial G-quadruplex resolution is required. A highly purified preparation of human telomerase retains this extension ability, establishing that the core telomerase enzyme complex is sufficient for partial G-quadruplex resolution and extension. The parallel-specific G-quadruplex ligand N-methyl mesoporphyrin IX (NMM) causes an increase in telomeric G-quadruplexes, and we show that telomerase colocalizes with a subset of telomeric G-quadruplexes in vivo. The ability of telomerase to partially unwind, extend and localize to these structures implies that parallel telomeric G-quadruplexes may play an important biological role.
Human chromosomes terminate with ∼5–10 kb of the telomeric
DNA repeat TTAGGG12. The shortening of telomeres to a critical length
is a signal for cellular senescence34. Telomere shortening is
counteracted by telomerase, the telomere-specific reverse transcriptase that contains an
RNA template to direct the addition of telomeric DNA by the catalytic telomerase reverse
transcriptase (TERT) component567. Telomerase is upregulated in
≥85% of tumours, providing a telomere maintenance mechanism that
contributes to cellular immortalization and tumour progression89.Telomeric DNA can fold into compact G-quadruplex structures involving the interaction of
four guanine bases in a square planar arrangement stabilized by central cations10. G-quadruplexes can form from one, two or four strands of DNA in a
parallel or antiparallel orientation11. Over 375,000 sequences with the
potential to form G-quadruplexes have been identified within the human genome12. There is increasing evidence supporting in vivo functions for
DNA and RNA G-quadruplexes, including telomere protection and involvement in
transcription, translation and splicing13141516. Direct evidence
for the existence of G-quadruplexes at telomeres was obtained using specific antibodies
against G-quadruplexes in the telomeric DNA of the ciliate Stylonychia
lemnae17. Recently, a G-quadruplex-specific antibody has also
been used to directly visualize G-quadruplexes throughout the human genome, a portion of
which is located at telomeres18. There are a large number of
small-molecule ligands that have specificity for G-quadruplexes, with many of them
causing telomere dysfunction in vivo and inhibiting telomerase activity in
vitro192021.The first report describing the inability of telomerase to extend G-quadruplexes, using
the ciliate Oxytricha nova, did not differentiate between specific conformations
as substrates22. In 2006, we demonstrated using purified G-quadruplex
structures that some conformations can be extended by telomerase from the ciliated
protozoa Tetrahymena thermophila and Euplotes aediculatus:
parallel-stranded intermolecular G-quadruplexes were substrates for ciliate telomerase,
whereas antiparallel intramolecular G-quadruplexes were not23. Telomere
biology is very different between ciliated protozoa and humans, and the telomerase
ribonucleoproteins from the two groups differ in key properties such as the ability to
extend non-telomeric DNA, the mechanism of template boundary definition and the
components and multimeric state of the enzyme complex2425262728.
The possibility therefore existed that the ability to extend parallel G-quadruplexes is
a ciliate-specific property of telomerase. Given the intense interest in telomerase
inhibition by G-quadruplex stabilizers as a potential cancer therapeutic2021, and the polymorphism of human telomeric G-quadruplexes11, we considered it important to determine the ability of human telomerase
to extend defined conformations of G-quadruplex.In this study, we establish that the ability to extend parallel intermolecular
G-quadruplexes is conserved among evolutionarily distant species. We characterize
purified, stable, conformationally homogenous human telomeric G-quadruplexes and
demonstrate that human telomerase is able to recognize and partially unwind parallel
intermolecular conformations and extend the unwound 3′ end in vitro.
Treatment of immortal human cells with the parallel-specific G-quadruplex ligand
N-methyl mesoporphyrin IX results in a significant increase in G-quadruplexes
present at telomeres in vivo, indicating the potential for formation of a
parallel G-quadruplex structure at human telomeres. We show that human telomerase
localizes to a subset of telomeres that contain G-quadruplexes in vivo.
Results
Folding and characterization of parallel G-quadruplexes
To test the ability of human telomerase to extend G-quadruplex DNA, we isolated
and characterized parallel, intermolecular G-quadruplexes, since this is the
conformation extended by ciliate telomerase23. To be certain that
telomerase extends the G-quadruplex rather than its unfolded linear counterpart,
it is necessary to work with structures with very slow unfolding rates under the
conditions of a telomerase activity assay (30 °C,
1 h). Human telomeres have one less contiguous guanine residue than
their ciliate counterparts (TTAGGG versus TTGGGG), which renders the
corresponding G-quadruplexes less stable29. It is possible,
however, to form stable human telomeric G-quadruplexes using cations such as
Sr2+, rather than K+ or
Na+ (refs 30, 31). Tetramolecular G-quadruplexes formed from short
oligonucleotides also tend to be relatively stable2932.The oligonucleotide 7GGT (Table 1) formed a tetrameric
G-quadruplex, [7GGT]4, when annealed in buffer
containing 150 mM KCl, and gave a single band upon native gel
electrophoresis. This band was purified from the native gel and remained
>98% pure after purification (Fig. 1a).
The circular dichroism (CD) spectrum of [7GGT]4
gave a positive signal at 260 nm and a negative signal at
240 nm, characteristic of a parallel G-quadruplex (Fig. 1b)33. The ultraviolet thermal difference
spectrum (TDS)34 of [7GGT]4 showed a
negative peak at 295 nm (Supplementary Fig. 1a), supporting the assignment of a G-quadruplex
structure2932.
Table 1
Oligonucleotides used and G-quadruplex structures characterized in this
study.
Nomenclature
Sequence (5′–3′)
Length (nt)
G4 nomenclature
Annealing cation
Strand orientation
Strand stoichiometry
T½(°C)
7GGT
TTAGGGT
7
[7GGT]4
150 mM K+
Parallel
Tetramer
68
22GGG
AGGG(TTAGGG)3
22
[22GGG]2
2.5 mM Sr2+
Parallel
Dimer
>90
22GGG
AGGG(TTAGGG)3
22
[22GGG]1
2.5 mM Sr2+
Antiparallel
Intramolecular
68
9C
CCCTAACCC
9
T15
TTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
15
T25
TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
25
Figure 1
Characterization of gel-purified telomeric G-quadruplexes.
(a) Native gel electrophoresis of purified 32P-labelled
[7GGT]4 in 150 mM
K+. Lane 1: [7GGT]4
after gel purification. Lane 2: unfolded 7GGT. Lanes 3 and 4: T25
and T15 unstructured molecular weight (MW) markers. (b) CD
spectrum of gel-purified [7GGT]4 in
150 mM K+. (c) Native gel
electrophoresis of G-quadruplexes formed from 22GGG in 2.5 mM
Sr2+, stained in SYBR Gold. Lane 1: unpurified
folded 22GGG. Lane 2: post-purification folded 22GGG upper band,
[22GGG]2. Lane 3: post-purification 22GGG
lower band, [22GGG]1. Lanes 4 and 5:
unstructured MW markers T25 and T15. (d) CD
spectra of gel-purified 22GGG G-quadruplexes in 2.5 mM
Sr2+. (e) Negative ion ESI mass spectra
of the lower band of folded 22GGG and (f) the upper band of folded
22GGG. ● [M-5H]5−;
◊ [M-4H]4−; ○
[M+Sr2+-7H]5−;
♦
[M+Sr2+-6H]4−;
▪
[2M+3Sr2+-13H]7−;
□
[2M+3Sr2+-14H]8−.
The oligonucleotide 22GGG (Table 1) gave rise to two
bands on a native gel when annealed in 2.5 mM
Sr2+ (Fig. 1c). The migration
of the upper and lower bands was consistent with formation of intermolecular and
intramolecular structures, respectively10. Each G-quadruplex band
remained ≥95% pure after gel purification (Fig.
1c); no linear 22GGG was observed after purification. CD analysis of
the upper band was indicative of a parallel G-quadruplex structure (Fig. 1d), whereas the lower band gave a maximum absorbance
at 295 nm and a minimum at 260 nm, consistent with an
antiparallel structure (Fig. 1d). The TDS spectra for both
the upper and lower bands of 22GGG confirmed G-quadruplex structures (Supplementary Fig. 1b,c).Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) was used to determine
G-quadruplex stoichiometry3536. The purified 22GGG lower band
gave predominant ions that were assigned to unimolecular species, consistent
with the inclusion of an Sr2+ ion within an
intramolecular G-quadruplex (Fig. 1e; Supplementary Table 1). A lower-abundance ion
can be assigned as the dimeric G-quadruplex species
[2M+3Sr2+-13H]7−
(where M is neutral, unimolecular 22GGG), consistent with the observation of
some reformation of the upper parallel G-quadruplex after purification.
Together, the migration pattern on native gel electrophoresis, ESI-MS and CD
analysis indicate that the lower band of 22GGG annealed in
Sr2+ is an intramolecular antiparallel G-quadruplex,
which will henceforth be referred to as
[22GGG]1.The predominant ions observed from the purified upper band of 22GGG represented
bimolecular DNA along with a unimolecular G-quadruplex (Fig.
1f; Supplementary Table
1); this is consistent with the observation of some upper band
converting to the intramolecular G-quadruplex after purification. The ESI mass
spectrum, combined with CD and TDS analysis and native gel electrophoresis, is
consistent with a parallel, dimeric G-quadruplex, here called
[22GGG]2.
Absence of spontaneous unfolding of G-quadruplexes
The relative stabilities of the purified G-quadruplexes were initially assessed
by determining their melting temperatures. Since intermolecular G-quadruplexes
reform very slowly and are therefore not at equilibrium during the measurement,
we refer to this value as T½ rather than
Tm, which is the true thermodynamic parameter at
equilibrium29. The ultraviolet melting curve of
[7GGT]4 gave a T½ of
68 °C (measured at a heating rate of
1 °C min−1; Supplementary Fig. 1d; Table 1).To determine the amount of [7GGT]4 that unfolds
during the course of a telomerase activity assay (30 °C,
1 h), we employed a complementary C-strand trap assay. A 10-fold
excess of C-rich complementary strand (Table 1) was
added to the G-quadruplex in the same buffer used for telomerase activity assays
(described below), and the extent of Watson–Crick duplex formation was
monitored over 4 h by non-denaturing gel electrophoresis3738 (Fig. 2a). Control experiments
established that the result was unaffected by increasing C-strand
concentrations, up to 100-fold over G-quadruplex (Supplementary Fig. 2a), demonstrating that
the rate of Watson–Crick duplex formation reflects the rate of
G-quadruplex unfolding. After 1 h at 30 °C,
∼1% of the G-quadruplex had hybridized to the complementary
strand, with ∼3–4% hybridized after 4 h
(Fig. 2a,b). As a further test of the stability of
[7GGT]4, the G-quadruplex was treated with
phosphodiesterase 1 (P1), which cleaves single-stranded DNA exonucleolytically
at the 3′ end. Under conditions identical to the telomerase activity
assays below (30 °C for 1 h), all of the
P1-treated linear 7GGT was digested while no
[7GGT]4 digestion was detected (Fig. 2c). The 7-nt oligonucleotide remained intact after digestion,
demonstrating that even the single thymidine at the 3′ end of each of
the four strands is participating in tertiary structure and being protected from
digestion. Overall, these data demonstrate that the G-quadruplex
[7GGT]4 is stable under the conditions of the
telomerase activity assay.
Figure 2
Stability of telomeric G-quadruplexes.
(a) [7GGT]4 complementary strand trap
assay: 5′-end-labelled [7GGT]4 in
150 mM K+, incubated with 10-fold excess
complementary strand 9C at 30 °C and electrophoresed on a
12% non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel. Lane 1: unstructured
molecular weight (MW) marker T15. Lane 2: denatured 7GGT. Lane 3:
pre-annealed Watson–Crick (WC) duplex. Lane 4: gel-purified
[7GGT]4 G-quadruplex. Lanes 5–11:
[7GGT]4 incubated with 9C at
30 °C for the indicated times. Lane 12:
[7GGT]4. Lane 13: pre-annealed WC duplex.
Samples were loaded at the times indicated, with the gel running between
loadings, so later samples underwent shorter electrophoresis times. The last
three lanes were loaded simultaneously. (b) Proportion of
[7GGT]4 remaining over time at
30 °C. Error bars represent s.d. of the mean of three
independent experiments. (c) P1 digestion of 7GGT and
[7GGT]4 electrophoresed on a 12%
denaturing polyacrylamide gel; digestions were performed in triplicate.
Control lane: end-labelled 7GGT. (d)
[22GGG]2 complementary strand trap assay.
Unlabelled [22GGG]2 in 2.5 mM
Sr2+, incubated with 10-fold excess
complementary strand 9C at 30 °C, electrophoresed on a
16% non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel and stained in SYBR Gold.
Lane 1: unstructured MW marker T25. Lane 2: pre-annealed WC
duplex. Lane 3: gel-purified [22GGG]2. Lanes
4–11: G-quadruplex [22GGG]2 incubated
with 9C at 30 °C for the indicated times. Lane 12:
gel-purified [22GGG]2. (e) P1 digestion
of 22GGG hybridized to complementary strand 9C, linear 22GGG and
[22GGG]2, electrophoresed on a
12% denaturing polyacrylamide gel; digestions were performed in
triplicate. Control lane: end-labelled 22GGG. (f) Data from e,
quantified. Error bars represent s.d. of the mean of triplicates. LC
indicates a 32P-labelled 100-nt oligonucleotide used as a
control for loading and recovery.
The T½ values of [22GGG]2
and [2GGG]1 were >90 and
68 °C, respectively, when measured at
1 °C min−1 (Supplementary Fig. 1e,f; Table 1). The high melting temperature of the dimeric
species indicates that it is an exceptionally stable structure. An identical
complementary C-strand experiment was performed with
[22GGG]2 in 2.5 mM
Sr2+ buffer. After 4 h at
30 °C, there was no observable duplex formation, indicating
that the [22GGG]2 G-quadruplex does not unfold
under our assay conditions (Fig. 2d). This was confirmed
by digestion with P1 at 30 °C for 1 h; no
digestion of [22GGG]2 was observed (Fig. 2e,f, right lanes). It should be noted that any
[22GGG]2 that did unfold over days or weeks in
storage rapidly formed [22GGG]1, with no linear
22GGG oligonucleotide observed (Fig. 1c).Intramolecular G-quadruplexes often display rapid folding and unfolding
rates2339. Under the conditions used in this study, it was
not possible to obtain a native gel or CD spectrum that corresponded to linear,
unfolded 22GGG in the presence of 2.5 mM SrCl2. When
incubated with P1, only ∼30% of ‘linear'
22GGG in 2.5 mM SrCl2 was digested (Fig.
2e,f, middle lanes). This suggests that linear 22GGG in the presence
of Sr2+ is in rapid equilibrium with
[22GGG]1. To confirm this, we
‘locked' linear 22GGG into an unfolded conformation by
pre-binding it with the 9C complementary oligonucleotide (Supplementary Fig. 2b), as previously
described39. After digestion with P1, only 10% of
the DNA remained undigested (Fig. 2e,f, left lanes). These
data demonstrate that the P1 exonuclease was functional in this experiment, and
that linear 22GGG and intramolecular [22GGG]1
G-quadruplex are in rapid equilibrium when in the presence of 2.5 mM
Sr2+.
Parallel G-quadruplexes are substrates of human telomerase
Telomerase activity assays were performed with the G-quadruplexes characterized
above to determine whether parallel, intermolecular G-quadruplexes are a
substrate for human telomerase. Telomerase was prepared by overexpressing its
components in 293T cells40 and immunopurifying the assembled
complex with an hTERT antibody41. The G-quadruplex
[7GGT]4 was readily extended by human
telomerase (Fig. 3a): the Michaelis–Menton
constant (Km) for 7GGT was 100±20 nM and
that for [7GGT]4 was
500±120 nM (mean±s.d.;
n=4–6). Notably, both substrates supported equal
amounts of catalytic activity, with a relative Vmax
(folded/linear) of 0.97±0.07 (mean±s.d.;
P=0.3, one-sample t-test; n=7).
Figure 3
Extension of 7GGT and [7GGT]4 by human
telomerase.
(a) Telomerase activity assays with immunopurified telomerase and the
indicated concentrations of either 7GGT or
[7GGT]4. The concentrations of
[7GGT]4 refer to concentrations of the
assembled, four-stranded G-quadruplex. (b) Silver-stained
SDS–PAGE gel of highly purified telomerase (GG). (c)
Immunoblot for DHX36 with immunopurified (IP) or highly purified (GG)
telomerase. The bottom panel shows a dot-blot northern for hTR,
demonstrating equal loading of telomerase in the gel. (d) Telomerase
activity assays with 2 μM 7GGT or
[7GGT]4 with immunopurified (IP) or highly
purified (GG) telomerase, using equal amounts of each enzyme; reactions were
performed in duplicate. For a and d, the asterisk indicates
the first visible addition product (n+3); LC indicates a
32P-labelled 100-nt oligonucleotide used as a control for
loading and recovery.
There is a possibility that the one-step telomerase immunopurification method
used in these experiments could allow co-immunopurification of other proteins
that may selectively unwind the parallel G-quadruplexes, allowing the observed
extension. To exclude this possibility, we purified human telomerase further
with a four-step procedure involving immunopurification, capture onto an
immobilized telomeric DNA substrate, release of active enzyme and sedimentation
over a glycerol gradient42 (Fig. 3b); the
specific activity of telomerase on an 18-nt telomeric substrate does not change
over the course of purification (Supplementary Fig. 3). The purity of this telomerase was confirmed on
a silver-stained SDS–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) gel
(Fig. 3b); the only visible protein bands correspond
to the sizes of the core telomerase components hTERT and dyskerin42. The G-quadruplex helicase DHX36 (also known as G4R1 or RHAU) has been shown
to associate with a portion of active telomerase in immortal human cells4344; we confirmed this association in our 293T system by
immunoblot analysis for DHX36 on one-step immunopurified telomerase (Fig. 3c). However, our four-step purification procedure
resulted in loss of DHX36, confirmed by immunoblot of an equal molar amount of
highly purified telomerase (GG in Fig. 3c).Telomerase activity assays were performed with this highly purified telomerase
alongside one-step immunopurified telomerase. The relative activity using
[7GGT]4 G-quadruplex and 7GGT linear DNA as
substrates was the same for highly purified as for one-step purified telomerase
(Fig. 3d). This confirms that the core telomerase
enzyme complex is sufficient for extension of
[7GGT]4.The dimeric parallel G-quadruplex [22GGG]2 was also
readily extended by immunopurified human telomerase, with a Km
of 53±10 nM (Fig. 4a;
mean±s.d.; n=4), under conditions in which we had
demonstrated that this G-quadruplex is extremely stable.
[22GGG]2 was also extended by the highly
purified telomerase preparation (Fig. 4b). Thus, the core
human telomerase complex is capable of extending multiple parallel,
intermolecular G-quadruplexes.
Figure 4
Extension of linear 22GGG and [22GGG]2, but not
[22GGG]1, by human telomerase.
(a) Telomerase activity assays with immunopurified telomerase and the
indicated concentrations of either linear 22GGG or
[22GGG]2. (b) Telomerase activity
assays with 1 μM linear 22GGG or
[22GGG]2 with immunopurified (IP) or highly
purified (GG) telomerase, using equal amounts of each enzyme. (c)
Telomerase activity assays with immunopurified telomerase and
1 μM [22GGG]1 and
[22GGG]2, with or without complementary
strand 9C as indicated; reactions were performed in duplicate. (d)
Quantification of c normalized against 22GGG pre-annealed with 9C.
Error bars represent s.d. of the mean of three independent experiments. In
all panels, the asterisk indicates the first visible addition product
(n+4), and LC indicates a 32P-labelled
100-nt oligonucleotide used as a control for loading and recovery.
Obtaining reproducibly quantitative telomerase activity assays for linear 22GGG
and [22GGG]1 was confounded by the rapid
interconversion between the folded and unfolded forms. It is well established
that intramolecular, antiparallel G-quadruplexes are not good substrates for
either ciliate or human telomerase222339. To confirm that
this is also the case for the [22GGG]1
intramolecular G-quadruplex folded in Sr2+, we again
‘locked' linear 22GGG in Sr2+ into
the unfolded form by hybridizing it with the complementary DNA oligonucleotide
9C39, which resulted in a twofold recovery of activity (Fig. 4c,d). In contrast, addition of the complementary
strand to the [22GGG]2 G-quadruplex did not affect
activity (Fig. 4c,d). These data support our hypothesis
that unfolded 22GGG is in equilibrium between linear and antiparallel
G-quadruplex conformations, and confirm that the antiparallel
[22GGG]1 G-quadruplex is a less-favourable
substrate for human telomerase than its linear counterpart. Taken together,
these data demonstrate that multiple parallel, intermolecular G-quadruplexes are
substrates for human telomerase, while an antiparallel, intramolecular
G-quadruplex is not, despite the much higher stability of the former
G-quadruplexes. We have also demonstrated that the core human telomerase enzyme
complex is sufficient for parallel G-quadruplex extension.
We have demonstrated that, for Tetrahymena telomerase, parallel
G-quadruplex substrates increase the Km of telomerase for the
incoming dTTP nucleotide, presumably by perturbation of the nucleotide-binding
site by the wider G-quadruplex substrate37. The
Km of human telomerase for dTTP was determined in the
presence of saturating [7GGT]4 G-quadruplex and
7GGT linear DNA at a range of dTTP concentrations (Fig.
5a). The Km of telomerase for dTTP increased
approximately fivefold in the presence of the G-quadruplex substrate, from
2.8±0.5 μM for linear 7GGT to
15±5 μM with
[7GGT]4 (mean±s.d.;
P=0.0136, unpaired two-tailed t-test;
n=3). This change in Km provides evidence
that the observed extension is occurring with two conformationally distinct
substrates.
Figure 5
Telomerase partially unwinds and extends [7GGT]4
and [22GGG]2.
(a) Telomerase activity assays with immunopurified telomerase, using
1 μM 7GGT or [7GGT]4 and
the indicated concentrations of dTTP. The asterisk indicates the first
visible addition product (n+3). (b) Expected
telomerase products upon alignment of 7GGT or 22GGG with the RNA template in
the presence of different combinations of nucleotides. (c) Telomerase
activity assay followed by native gel electrophoresis. Lane 1:
5′-end-labelled [22GGG]1. Lane 2:
mixture of 5′-end-labelled [22GGG]1
and [22GGG]2, demonstrating separation of the
two species. Lane 3: products of unlabelled
[22GGG]1 and
[22GGG]2 following telomerase extension in
the presence of [α-32P]-dTTP.
Unstructured marker added for orientation purposes. (d) Templated
addition of nucleotides to 7GGT and [7GGT]4.
G-quadruplexes and their linear counterparts (2 μM)
were incubated with telomerase in the presence of: lanes 1 and 5:
32P-dTTP and dATP; lanes 2 and 6:
32P-dTTP, dATP and ddGTP; lanes 3 and 7:
32P-dTTP, dATP and dGTP; lanes 4 and 8: dTTP, dATP and
32P-dGTP, and products electrophoresed on a denaturing
12% acrylamide gel. Migration position of different products is
shown. (e) Templated addition of nucleotides to 22GGG and
[22GGG]2. G-quadruplexes and their linear
counterparts (2 μM) were incubated with telomerase in
the presence of: lanes 1 and 4: 32P-dTTP and ddATP; lanes 2
and 5: 32P-dTTP, dATP and ddGTP; lanes 3 and 6: dTTP, dATP
and 32P-dGTP, and products electrophoresed on a denaturing
12% acrylamide gel. End-labelled T25 and 22GGG markers
are on the left of the gel. Migration position of different products is
shown. In all panels, LC indicates a 32P-labelled 100-nt
oligonucleotide used as a control for loading and recovery.
We demonstrated the maintenance of G-quadruplex structure following telomerase
extension directly, by visualizing telomerase extension products by native gel
electrophoresis. A mixture of unlabelled [22GGG]1
and [22GGG]2 was extended by telomerase in the
presence of [α-32P]-dTTP (Fig. 5b,c). Under native gel electrophoresis conditions, a
single band was present following telomerase extension (Fig.
5c, lane 3) that aligns with an authentic 32P-labelled
[22GGG]2 marker (Fig. 5c,
lane 2). These data provide evidence that the
[22GGG]2 parallel G-quadruplex structure is
maintained following extension by telomerase. Direct observation of
[22GGG]2 specifically labelled through
extension by telomerase provides unequivocal evidence that G-quadruplex DNA must
be the substrate utilized by telomerase.The telomerase RNA template hybridizes to telomeric DNA to enable telomere
extension with the correct alignment. Ciliate telomerase can perform extension
of non-telomeric substrates without any complementarity between the DNA primer
and RNA template, using a specific template position as the default for the
initiation of extension26. We wished to test whether the
extension of parallel G-quadruplexes is preceded by canonical template
hybridization (Fig. 5b). We performed telomerase activity
assays in the presence of different combinations of nucleotides, for both
[7GGT]4 and
[22GGG]2 (Fig. 5d,e). A
standard processive reaction including
[α-32P]-dGTP, dATP and dTTP provided
a marker for band positions, as the major pause site in a processive reaction is
at the end of the template (products ending in –TAG; see labelling of
gel in Fig. 5d,e). In the presence of only
[α-32P]-dTTP and dATP, we
anticipated the addition of two nucleotides (TA) and three nucleotides (TTA) to
primers 7GGT and 22GGG, respectively, if the terminal 3′ nucleotides
are correctly aligning with the RNA template (Fig. 5b).
Because addition of ddGTP results in termination of DNA strand elongation, we
anticipated the addition of three nucleotides (TAG) and four nucleotides (TTAG)
to 7GGT and 22GGG, respectively, in the presence of
[α-32P]-dTTP, dATP and ddGTP. In
all cases, the patterns of extension of parallel G-quadruplexes
[7GGT]4 and
[22GGG]2 are identical to their respective
linear controls (Fig. 5d,e) and correspond with expected
nucleotide addition patterns (Fig. 5b). For canonical
hybridization to occur, at least a portion of the parallel G-quadruplex
structure must be unwound. As native gel electrophoresis demonstrated alignment
of the extended parallel G-quadruplex with an identical
32P-labelled marker (Fig. 5c), we conclude
that parallel G-quadruplexes are partially unwound to allow hybridization of the
telomerase template with the 3′ end of the DNA.
Telomerase localizes to G-quadruplex-containing telomeres
To investigate the presence of parallel telomeric G-quadruplexes in cells, we
performed immunofluorescence on humanembryonic kidney293T cells using a
G-quadruplex-specific antibody18. Fixed cells were subjected to
cytoplasmic extraction prior to immunofluorescence to remove RNA G-quadruplexes;
a DNase-treated control demonstrates the specificity of the antibody for DNA
G-quadruplexes under these conditions (Fig. 6a, top
right). A subset of telomeres colocalized with G-quadruplex foci (Fig. 6a, top panel), as previously demonstrated18.
Treatment of the cells with the parallel-specific G-quadruplex porphyrin ligand
N-methyl mesoporphyrin IX454647 (Supplementary Fig. 4a) during mid-S phase of
the cell cycle resulted in an increase in the number of
G-quadruplex–telomere colocalizations per cell (Fig.
6a,b), without affecting progression of the cells into mid-S phase
(Supplementary Fig. 4b). These
data provide evidence that parallel G-quadruplexes can form at human telomeres
in vivo.
Figure 6
G-quadruplex-containing telomeres are a site of localization for human
telomerase.
(a) Immunofluorescence with G-quadruplex antibody BG4 together with
telomere FISH, in mid-S-phase HEK 293T cells with no treatment (top),
vehicle (dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), middle) or parallel-specific ligand
N-methyl mesoporphyrin IX (NMM) (bottom). DNAse treatment is
included as a G-quadruplex antibody control (top right). (b)
Quantification of number of telomere-G-quadruplex colocalizations per cell
from a. One hundred nuclei were counted per condition in two (DMSO)
or three (untreated and NMM) independent experiments. Error bars represent
the s.e.m. Statistical significance was calculated using an unpaired
t-test;
****P<0.0001 (c)
Immunofluorescence with G-quadruplex antibody BG4 together with FISH for
telomeres and telomerase RNA (hTR). (d) Quantification of
hTR–telomere–BG4 trilocalization frequency, relative to
telomerase–telomere localization events. Hundred nuclei were
counted in each of the three independent experiments. Error bars represent
the s.e.m. Scale bars, 10 μm. NS, not significant.
Since human telomerase can extend parallel G-quadruplexes in vitro, we
asked whether telomeric G-quadruplexes are a site of localization for human
telomerase in vivo. 293T cells were synchronized in mid-S phase, which is
the peak of telomerase recruitment to telomeres48. Using
G-quadruplex immunofluorescence, combined with fluorescence in situ
hybridization (FISH) for telomerase RNA (hTR) and telomeres49, we
observed the simultaneous colocalization of endogenous telomerase,
G-quadruplexes and telomeres (Fig. 6c; Supplementary Fig. 5). Control experiments
demonstrate that depletion of dyskerin, a component of the core telomerase
complex42, markedly reduces hTR foci, verifying the
specificity of the FISH signal (Supplementary Fig. 6). G-quadruplex foci colocalized with
∼17% of total hTR-telomere foci (Fig.
6d). These results reveal that human telomerase can localize to
telomeres at which G-quadruplexes are present.
Discussion
It has been hypothesized that G-quadruplexes can sequester the 3′ end of
the telomere and prevent it from being extended by telomerase2239.
Here, we demonstrate that parallel intermolecular telomeric G-quadruplexes are
partially unwound and robustly extended by human telomerase. We used highly purified
telomerase to show that the core telomerase enzyme complex has the ability to
partially unwind the G-quadruplexes prior to their extension.The apparent affinity of telomerase for the incoming dTTP nucleotide was
significantly reduced when extending [7GGT]4 compared
with linear 7GGT, suggesting a change in the conformation of (or near) the active
site of telomerase to accommodate the wider G-quadruplex structure. This difference
of Km with different conformations of DNA substrate demonstrates
that the parallel G-quadruplex is a substrate for telomerase while still at least
partially structured, an observation we confirmed using native gel electrophoresis
of a parallel G-quadruplex following extension (Fig. 5c).
Nevertheless, the telomerase extension patterns demonstrate correct alignment of the
3′ end of the DNA substrate with the RNA template, indicating that
parallel G-quadruplexes are partially unwound by or invaded by telomerase. Neither
of the parallel G-quadruplexes in this study demonstrated any hybridization to a
complementary DNA oligonucleotide or digestion by a nuclease under the conditions of
the telomerase activity assays, arguing against a model of spontaneous transient
unfolding of the DNA 3′ ends followed by telomerase extension. Given the
exceptional stability of the [22GGG]2 G-quadruplex, in
particular, these data support an extension model where the parallel G-quadruplex
structure is bound and subsequently partially resolved by telomerase prior to
extension of the DNA 3′ end (Fig. 7). We are
currently investigating the mechanism of this resolution, including the regions of
telomerase responsible, given that neither hTERT nor dyskerin contains a known
helicase domain. It is possible that telomerase uses a similar mechanism as that
proposed for replication protein A, involving binding to the single-stranded loop
regions between stacks of G-quartets50.
Figure 7
Proposed model for telomerase action at telomeric G-quadruplexes.
Telomerase binds to a parallel G-quadruplex structure. The core telomerase
complex is then able to partially unwind the G-quadruplex allowing
hybridization of the RNA template and DNA extension.
Currently, there are a large number of laboratories investigating the interactions of
stabilizing ligands with G-quadruplexes. It is therefore crucial to determine the
specificity of human telomerase for the different conformations of G-quadruplexes,
such that once the in vivo structure(s) of human telomeres is determined,
suitable G-quadruplex-stabilizing ligands of appropriate specificity can be
rationally selected. Although in vivo evidence for G-quadruplex structures is
increasing, the structure-specific locations and functions of G-quadruplexes remain
speculative. Our in vivo data indicate that parallel G-quadruplexes can form
at human telomeres, and that telomeres containing a G-quadruplex are a site of
localization for human telomerase. That telomerase is also able to partially unwind
and extend these structures, and the evolutionary conservation of this property in
distantly related organisms such as Tetrahymena23, implies
that telomeric DNA in a parallel G-quadruplex conformation may have a biological
role. In support of this idea, it has been demonstrated that promotion of parallel
telomeric G-quadruplexes by the Saccharomyces cerevisiae protein Est1p is
essential for telomerase-mediated telomere elongation in that organism51. One potential biological role for telomeric G-quadruplexes in human
cells may be during meiosis, when two pairs of sister chromatids are brought
together; it has been suggested that parallel G-quadruplexes could be responsible
for the correct alignment of the four chromatids52. The ability of
telomerase to partially unwind and extend parallel G-quadruplexes potentially formed
during meiosis may be necessary for the maintenance of germline telomere length.
Alternatively, G-quadruplexes may be involved in the association of telomeres of
sister chromatids during S phase, which is known to be necessary for telomerase to
lengthen telomeres in human cells53. The data presented here provide
evidence that subtypes of telomeric G-quadruplexes interact differentially with
human telomerase, possibly reflecting their different biological roles.
Methods
Oligonucleotide preparation
DNA oligonucleotides (Table 1) were purchased from Sigma
Genosys in desalted form. All oligonucleotides were purified by electrophoresis
on denaturing 20% polyacrylamide/8 M urea gels in 1
× TBE buffer (89 mM Tris, 89 mM borate and
2 mM EDTA). The major band was excised and eluted by crushing and
soaking for 12–16 h at 4 °C with
rotation in TEK (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5–8.0,
1 mM EDTA and 250 mM KCl) for 7GGT and TESr
(10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5–8.0, 1 mM EDTA and
250 mM SrCl2) for 22GGG, and ethanol precipitated for
2–16 h at −20 °C. The
precipitated product was resuspended in 10 mM Tris-Cl, pH 7.5.
G-quadruplex formation and purification
7GGT (1 mM) or 22GGG (700 μM) were heat denatured in
K+ hTel buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0,
1 mM MgCl2 and 150 mM KCl) or
Sr2+hTel buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0,
1 mM MgCl2 and 2.5 mM SrCl2),
respectively, for 5 min at 95 °C. They were
allowed to cool slowly (∼1 h) to 25 °C and
left to equilibrate at this temperature for 72 h. The folded DNA was
added to 6 × native gel loading buffer (0.25% bromophenol
blue, 0.25% xylene cyanol and 30% glycerol). 7GGT was
electrophoresed on a non-denaturing 12% polyacrylamide gel containing
150 mM KCl for 4.5 h at 12 W at
22 °C. 22GGG was electrophoresed on a non-denaturing
12% polyacrylamide gel containing 2.5 mM SrCl2
for 24 h at 40 V at 18 °C. Both buffer
and gel contained the same constituents as the DNA-folding buffer. Ultraviolet
shadowing was used to confirm the location of the DNA bands on the gel. The band
of interest was excised and crushed in either TEK (7GGT) or TESr (22GGG) and
incubated for 2–16 h at 4 °C with
rotation. The supernatant was filtered (0.22 μm) and the
DNA precipitated with ethanol for 2–16 h at
−20 °C. The precipitated product was resuspended in
the original folding buffer. DNA concentrations were determined by ultraviolet
absorbance at 260 nm (7GGT:
69,800 M−1 cm−1;
22GGG:
228,500 M−1 cm−1;
9C:
76,500 M−1 cm−1).
Concentrations of G-quadruplexes are given as the concentration of assembled
complexes (that is, taking strand stoichiometry into account). Folded
G-quadruplexes were stored at 4 °C until use.In some experiments, oligonucleotides were 5′-end-labelled with
[γ-32P]ATP prior to G-quadruplex
formation and purification, as described23. Radiolabelled
structures were used for some native gel analyses (for example, Fig. 1a), and P1 digestion assays, at 10–15 ×
103 c.p.m. per gel lane, whereas unlabelled
G-quadruplexes were used for telomerase assays, CD analysis and other native gel
analyses (for example, Fig. 1c). In the latter experiment,
250 ng of each DNA was electrophoresed on a non-denaturing
12% polyacrylamide gel, which was stained in 1 × SYBR Gold
(Life Technologies) at 25 °C for 30 min, and
visualized on a Typhoon FLA9500 scanner (GE Healthcare Lifesciences) using a
488-nm laser and a 526 BP emission filter.
Circular dichroism
CD spectra were recorded at 25 °C on a Jasco J-810
spectrometer or an Aviv 215S CD spectrometer equipped with a Peltier temperature
controller. G-quadruplex samples of the desired conformation were prepared at
20 μM in corresponding hTel buffers. Four scans were
accumulated over the wavelength range 220–320 nm in a
0.1-cm pathlength cell at standard sensitivity, data pitch 0.1 nm,
continuous scanning mode, scanning speed
100 nm min−1, response
4 s and bandwidth 1 nm. Buffers alone were also scanned
and these spectra subtracted from the average scans for each sample. CD spectra
were collected in units of millidegrees, normalized to the total species
concentrations and expressed as molar ellipticity units (deg ×
cm2 dmol−1).
Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry
All ESI mass spectra were obtained using a Waters Q-TOF Ultima ESI mass
spectrometer (Manchester, UK). Purified G-quadruplex samples were dissolved in
150 mM NH4OAc at a concentration of
20 μM. In all experiments the capillary voltage
(2.2 kV), cone voltage (35 V), desolvation temperature
(40 °C), radio frequency lens (65 V), desolvation
gas flow (150 l h−1), collision
energy (4 V), cone gas flow (0.0021,
l h−1) and TOF (9.1 kV)
remained the same. All spectra were obtained in the negative ion mode. The
instrument was calibrated using
1 mg ml−1 caesium iodide.
Samples were injected at a flow rate of
10 μl min−1 with a
Harvard Model 22 syringe pump (Natick, USA).
Complementary C-strand trap assay
This method was carried out using a modified procedure to that published3738. 32P-labelled gel-purified
[7GGT]4
(3,000 c.p.m. μl−1,
4 μM) or unlabelled [22GGG]2
(2.5 μM) were incubated in the presence of a 10-fold
excess of 9C (Table 1) at 30 °C to
give a final reaction volume of 28 μl. Aliquots
(4 μl) of this hybridization reaction were removed at
regular time intervals and loaded onto a native 12% polyacrylamide
gel containing 150 mM KCl ([7GGT]4) or a
native 16% polyacrylamide gel containing 2.5 mM
SrCl2 ([22GGG]2), with the gel
running continuously between time points. Electrophoresis was conducted as
described above. For complementary C-strand trap assays with increasing 9C
concentrations, 32P-labelled gel-purified
[7GGT]4 was incubated at
11 μM in the presence of a 5-, 10-, 25- or 100-fold excess
of 9C at either 30 °C or 37 °C. For
[7GGT]4, the gel was dried at
80 °C for 40 min, exposed to a PhosphorImager
screen, visualized on a Typhoon FLA9500 scanner and analysed using ImageQuant
software. For [22GGG]2, the gel was stained with
SYBR Gold at 25 °C for 30 min, visualized on a
Typhoon FLA9500 scanner and analysed using ImageQuant software. Uncropped
versions of blots are provided in Supplementary Fig. 7.
Phosphodiesterase 1 digestion of G-quadruplexes
32P-end-labelled [7GGT]4 or
[22GGG]2 (15,000 c.p.m.) and their
linear controls were incubated with 2 μg P1 (Affymetrix;
resuspended in 110 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.9, 110 mM NaCl,
15 mM MgCl2 and 50% glycerol) in hTel buffer
(as listed above) for 1 h at 30 °C in a total
reaction volume of 20 μl. The reaction was terminated with
80 μl of stop-buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.3,
20 mM EDTA, 0.2% SDS and 1–2 ×
103 c.p.m. of a
5′-32P-labelled synthetic 100-mer DNA as an internal
recovery standard). From this point, the samples were treated in the same manner
as ‘telomerase activity assay' reactions (see below).
HEK293T fermentation and telomerase overexpression
HEK293T cells (from Dr Timothy Adams, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial
Research Organisation) were adapted to grow in suspension in Freestyle 293
Expression medium (Life Technologies) supplemented with
200 mg l−1 G418 (Life
Technologies) using a humidified shaker incubator (37 °C,
5% CO2, 130 r.p.m.). The adapted HEK293T
culture was maintained in Erlenmeyer shaker flasks and scaled up in a 20-l WAVE
bioreactor (GE Healthcare), seeded at an initial working volume of
5 l at a concentration of 0.8 × 106 viable
cells per ml. To reduce shear stress, Pluronic F86 (Life Technologies) was added
to the culture at 0.2% w/v final concentration. The culture was
scaled up to 20 l at a viable cell density of 3 ×
106 cells per ml, at which time transient transfection was
initiated. The hTERT gene54 under a CMV promoter was cloned into
plasmid pAPEX-3P4055. The hTR gene under a U3 promoter56 and dyskerin (OriGene Technologies) under a CMV promoter were
cloned into a single plasmid in vector pAPEX-3 (ref. 55). Plasmids were produced on the 200-mg scale by GenScript
(USA) and used at an hTERT:hTR ratio of 1:19 by weight. Polyethylenimine
(25 kDa linear, Polysciences) was prepared as an aqueous solution at
1 mg ml−1 at pH 7.0 and
filter-sterilized (0.22 μm). Per litre of culture, a
transfection mix was prepared by adding 1 mg DNA to 100 ml
PBS pre-warmed to 37 °C, followed by addition of
4 ml polyethylenimine solution; the solution was mixed gently and
incubated at room temperature (RT) for 15 min prior to addition to
the 20-l culture, which was maintained at 37 °C with a
rocking speed of 25 r.p.m. and rocking angle of 9°. At 2 days
after transfection, the culture was fed with
5 g l−1 Lupin (Cell
Biosciences), 2 mM Glutamax-1 (Life Technologies) and
5 g l−1 glucose (Sigma), and
the temperature was reduced to 32 °C. The cells were
harvested 4 days after transfection by centrifugation (1,500g,
10 min, 4 °C), snap-frozen on liquid nitrogen and
stored at −80 °C. Telomerase high-expressing
HEK293T cell pellets are available from Abbexa Ltd, Cambridge, UK.
Purification of overexpressed 293T telomerase
Approximately 130 g 293T cell mass (∼4 ×
1010 cells) was broken up to a paste in a 1-l plastic beaker.
The cell paste was suspended in 800 ml ice-cold lysis buffer
(10 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 8.0), 20 mM KCl, 2 mM
MgCl2, 1% v/v Triton X-100, 1 mM
dithiothreitol (DTT)). Once suspended, 8 ml of phenylmethylsulfonyl
fluoride solution (100 mM in ethanol, made fresh) was added with
stirring. The suspension was transferred in 50-ml portions to a 50-ml Dounce
homogenizer with a tight pestal on ice and processed to ensure complete
dissolution of cell paste, then pooled into a 1-l bottle equipped with magnetic
stir bar. The lysate was stirred on ice for 1 h, then divided between
four 250-ml bottles for the Beckman JA-14 rotor. The lysate was clarified with
centrifugation at 14,000 r.p.m. (∼30,000g) at
2 °C for 30 min. The clear lysate
(∼850 ml) was collected into a 1-l bottle equipped with
magnetic stirrer. With stirring on ice, 22 ml of 2 M
MgCl2 (∼50 mM final
Mg2+) was added and the suspension was stirred for
1 h to selectively precipitate ribonucleoprotein complexes57. The suspension was divided between four 250-ml bottles for the
Beckman JA-14 rotor, and the products were collected with centrifugation at
10,000 r.p.m. (∼15,000g) at 2 °C
for 30 min. The supernatant was decanted to provide white pellets.
Each pellet was suspended in 50 ml immunoprecipitation (IP) buffer
(50 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 8.0), 500 mM KCl, 2 mM
MgCl2, 1% v/v Triton X-100, 10% v/v
glycerol and 1 mM DTT). To aid dissolution, the suspension was
processed through a Dounce homogenizer with a tight pestal on ice until a
slightly white, homogeneous solution was obtained. The material was pooled into
a 500-ml bottle on ice, and the volume was made up to 300 ml with
additional IP buffer. Polyclonal hTERT antibody (raised against hTERT amino
acids 276–294 (ARPAEEATSLEGALSGTRH)41; available from
Abbexa Ltd)
(12 mg=40 μg ml−1
final concentration) was added and the solution shaken on ice for
30 min. To capture the antibody–telomerase complex,
12 ml of a 50% v/v slurry of Protein G/sepharose (GE
Healthcare) was added (20 μl beads per ml final
concentration) and the suspension was shaken on ice for 1.5 h.
Working in a cold room, the immunoprecipitate was collected into a 50-mm
diameter fritted glass column (Bio-Rad) with vacuum suction and then washed with
200 ml ice-cold IP buffer. The immunoprecipitate was suspended in
20 ml telomerase buffer (50 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 8.0),
300 mM KCl, 2 mM MgCl2, 0.1% v/v
Triton X-100, 10% v/v glycerol and 1 mM DTT) containing
3 mg peptide ARPAEEATSLEGALSGTRH (20 molar equiv per antibody,
available from Abbexa Ltd). The suspension was incubated at RT for
1 h with gentle shaking every 5 min, then the eluate was
either collected (for use in assays requiring immunopurified telomerase) or
transferred directly to a 25-mm diameter fritted glass column (Bio-Rad)
containing 15 nmol gel-purified
5′-BIOTIN-CTAGACCTGTCATCA(TTAGGG)3-3′
oligonucleotide immobilized on 500 μl UltraLink
Neutravidin Plus beads (Thermo-Fisher) (for the highly purified preparations in
Figs 3d and 4b). The suspension
was rotated at RT for 30 min and then at 4 °C for
1 h. For the work in this paper, it was necessary to elute telomerase
in the presence of two different solution-phase DNA ‘traps',
so that this DNA (traces of which remain in the purified telomerase preparation)
was identical to the substrates being tested: 6 ml of suspension was
collected in each of two 0.5-ml micro-spin columns (GE Healthcare), and washed
with 3 ml cold telomerase buffer. After washing, columns were
centrifuged for 10 s at 2,400 × g to remove residual
buffer. Each bead sample was suspended in 500 μl
telomerase buffer, followed by addition of 25 nmol of one of two
different solution-phase DNAs dissolved in 100 μl
telomerase buffer: (i) 7GGT (Table 1) or (ii)
[7GGT]4 G-quadruplex. Activity-dependent
elution was initiated by addition of 6 μl
dTTP+dATP (10 mM each deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate,
final concentration 0.1 mM). The suspensions were rotated at RT for
30 min and the product solutions collected with centrifugation at
2,400g for 10 s. Each product solution was layered on an
11-ml 10→40% glycerol gradient composed of (20 mM
HEPES-KOH (pH 8.0), 300 mM KCl, 2 mM MgCl2,
0.1% w/v octyl β-D-glucopyranoside and 1 mM DTT)
in Beckman Ultra-clear centrifuge tubes (14 × 89 mm) for
the Beckman SW-41 rotor. Telomerase was sedimented with centrifugation at
35,000 r.p.m. (∼210,000g at rmax) at
4 °C for 20 h. The tube was punctured at the
bottom with a 30-gauge needle, and 0.5-ml fractions were collected by gravity.
Fractions were assayed for telomerase concentration by dot-blot northern against
hTR as described40, and equal amounts of enzyme used in each
assay. Telomerase typically eluted in fractions 7–9;
∼3–5 pmol telomerase was obtained from each
gradient. For extension assays using linear 7GGT or
[7GGT]4 as substrates (Fig.
3d), the enzyme prepared in the presence of the equivalent
‘trap' DNA was used (with the
[7GGT]4-trapped enzyme being used for the
‘No DNA' lanes). Enzyme trapped with linear 7GGT was
dialysed into telomerase buffer containing 2.5 mM SrCl2,
and equal amounts of this enzyme used for the extension of 22GGG and
[22GGG]2 in Fig. 4b.
SDS–PAGE and silver-staining analysis of purified
telomerase
A 50-μl aliquot of purified telomerase, eluted in the presence of
[7GGT]4 G-quadruplex DNA, was placed in a
Pierce Slide-a-Lyzer mini-dialysis cup (MWCO 3,500) and dialysed at RT for
30 min against 200 ml of (20 mM HEPES-KOH (pH
8.0), 20 mM KCl, 2 mM MgCl2, 20% v/v
glycerol, 0.1% w/v octyl β-D-glucopyranoside and
1 mM DTT). For SDS–PAGE, 30 μl of the
dialysed solution was combined with 10 μl 10%
w/v SDS, 5 μl 1 M DTT and
5 μl 4 × NuPAGE LDS loading buffer (Life
Technologies). The sample was denatured at 80 °C for
10 min, cooled to RT and centrifuged at 16,000g for
1 min. A 20-μl aliquot was electrophoresed over a NuPAGE
4–12% bis-Tris gradient mini-gel at 100 V for
3 h. For the molecular weight marker, the Life Technologies Benchmark
protein ladder was diluted 100-fold in 1 × NuPAGE LDS loading buffer;
from this, 3 μl was diluted with
20 μl 1 × LDS buffer and loaded on the gel.
Silver staining was performed with the Life Technologies SilverXpress kit.
DHX36 western blotting
A 25-μl aliquot of immunopurified telomerase or four-step purified
telomerase, eluted in the presence of [7GGT]4
G-quadruplex DNA, was combined with: 20 μl H2O,
25 μl 4 × NuPAGE LDS loading buffer,
10 μl 1 M DTT and 20 μl
10% w/v SDS. The samples were denatured at 80 °C
for 10 min, cooled to RT and centrifuged at 16,000g for
1 min. A 30-μl aliquot of each was electrophoresed over a
NuPAGE 4–12% bis-Tris gradient mini-gel at 100 V
for 4 h. For the molecular weight marker, 2 μl
of the Life Technologies MagicMark-XP was used. Proteins were transferred to
polyvinylidene difluoride membranes at 30 V for 90 min.
Blocking, washing, secondary anti-rabbit and chemiluminescent detection were
performed using the Western Breeze reagents from Life Technologies. The primary
anti-DHX36 antibody was polyclonal from rabbit, Abcam #70269, diluted
1:500 in primary antibody diluent; probing was performed at RT for
2 h. Figure 3c represents a 10-min
exposure.
Dyskerin western blotting
HEK293T cell pellets were resuspended in 4 × NuPAGE LDS loading buffer,
2% β-mercaptoethanol and 2% Benzonase nuclease
(Merck Millipore) at 10,000 cells per μl. The samples were denatured
at 68 °C for 10 min and centrifuged at
16,000g for 1 min. A 5-μl aliquot of each was
electrophoresed over a NuPAGE 4–12% bis-Tris gradient
mini-gel at 100 V for 2 h. For the molecular weight
marker, 5 μl of the Bio-Rad Preision Plus prestained
marker was used. Proteins were transferred to nitrocellulose membrane at
100 V for 60 min. Membranes were blocked using
5% skim milk, probed with primary antibodies diluted in 1%
skim milk (mouse monoclonal anti-vinculin 1:5,000 (Sigma #V9131) or
polyclonal rabbit anti-dyskerin (in-house) 1:1,000) for 1 h at RT and
washed 5 × 5 min in TBST (0.24% Tris-Cl,
0.05% Tris, 0.8% NaCl and 0.1% Tween-20, pH
7.6). Membranes were then probed with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated
secondary antibodies (goat anti-mouse or goat anti-rabbit; DAKO) diluted 1:5,000
in 1% milk. Detection was performed with Amersham ECL Prime western
blotting detection reagent and a FujiFilm Las4000 luminescent image analyzer,
with autoexposure.
Telomerase activity assays
The following reaction was prepared to give 15 μl per
sample: between 1 nM and 2 μM of the specified
oligonucleotide, 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.5, 1 mM
MgCl2, 5 mM DTT, 1 mM spermidine-HCl,
0.5 mM dTTP, 0.5 mM dATP, 4.6 μM
non-radioactive dGTP and 0.33 μM
[α-32P]dGTP at
20 mCi ml−1,
6,000 Ci mmol−1 (PerkinElmer
Life Sciences), 10% glycerol and either 150 mM KCl for
experiments with 7GGT or 2.5 mM SrCl2 for experiments with
22GGG. The reaction was initiated by adding 5 μl of
purified human telomerase, and incubating at 30 °C for
1 h. The reaction was quenched by the addition of
80 μl of stop-buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.3,
20 mM EDTA and 0.2% SDS) and 1–2 ×
103 c.p.m. of a
5′-32P-labelled synthetic 100-mer DNA as an internal
recovery standard. The solution was extracted with an equal volume of
phenol/chloroform/isoamyl alcohol (25:24:1, v/v/v) and precipitated with ethanol
in the presence of 2.5 M NH4OAc. The pellet was air-dried
at RT for 15 min and dissolved in 5 μl TE
buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0 and 1 mM EDTA, pH 8.0),
followed by addition of 5 μl formamide buffer
(90% deionized formamide, 0.1% bromophenol blue and
0.1% xylene cyanol in 1 × TBE). The solution was heated at
90 °C for 5 min, and 3 μl
was electrophoresed over a 10% polyacrylamide sequencing gel
(0.2 mm thick × 40 cm length ×
35 cm width, 32-well comb) run in 1 × TBE/8 M
urea at 85 W. The gel was transferred to filter paper, dried for
30 min at 80 °C, exposed to a PhosphorImager
screen, visualized on a Typhoon FLA9500 scanner (GE Healthcare Lifesciences) and
analysed using ImageQuant software. The total intensities of extension products
were normalized against the intensity of the 32P-labelled 100-mer
recovery and loading control. Resulting values were expressed as a percentage of
the reaction with maximal activity and plotted against substrate concentrations
and fitted to the Michaelis–Menten equation to give
Km values.For experiments where dTTP was titrated, the oligonucleotide concentration was
kept at 1 μM and the concentration of dTTP was changed as
outlined in the figure legend. All other reagents and procedures remained the
same. Activity assays testing templated addition included
1–2 μM of the specified oligonucleotide and the
following combinations and concentrations of labelled and unlabelled
nucleotides; all other reaction conditions remained the same.7GGT: T,A lanes: 32P-dTTP (25 μM,
80 Ci mmol−1) and dATP
(0.5 mM).T,A,ddG lanes: 32P-dTTP (25 μM,
80 Ci mmol−1), dATP
(0.5 mM) and ddGTP (0.5 mM).T,A,G lanes: 32P-dTTP (25 μM,
80 Ci mmol−1), dATP
(0.5 mM) and dGTP (0.5 mM) or dTTP (0.5 mM),
dATP (0.5 mM) and 32P-dGTP
(5 μM,
400 Ci mmol−1).22GGG:T,A lanes: 32P-dTTP (3 μM,
150 Ci mmol−1) and ddATP
(25 μM).T,A,ddG lanes: 32P-dTTP (3 μM,
160 Ci mmol−1), dATP
(0.5 mM) and ddGTP (25 μM).T,A,G lanes: dTTP (0.5 mM), dATP (0.5 mM) and
32P-dGTP (5 μM,
400 Ci mmol−1).Experiments in which reaction products were subjected to native gel
electrophoresis contained 2 μM DNA,
0.7 μM non-radioactive dTTP and
0.33 μM
[α-32P]dTTP at
10 mCi ml−1,
3,000 Ci mmol−1, with all
other reaction conditions remaining the same. The reaction was quenched by the
addition of 20 μl of stop-buffer (see above) and 8
× 103 c.p.m. of a
5′-32P-labelled synthetic 100-mer DNA as an
internal recovery standard. The product was purified of unincorporated
deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates using two rounds of mini Quick Spin Oligo
column purification (Roche). Prior to use, Quick Spin Oligo columns were
equilibrated by centrifugation twice at 1,000g for 10 min with
400 μl Sr2+hTel buffer (see
above). The purified product was added to 6 × native gel loading
buffer (see above) and electrophoresed on a non-denaturing 16%
polyacrylamide gel containing 2.5 mM SrCl2 for
∼48 h at 40 V at 18 °C. Both
buffer and gel contained the same constituents as the DNA-folding buffer. The
gel was transferred to filter paper, dried for 30 min at
80 °C, exposed to a PhosphorImager screen, visualized on a
Typhoon FLA9500 scanner and analysed using ImageQuant software.
Expression and purification of G-quadruplex antibody (BG4)
BG4-encoding plasmid (from the laboratory of Professor Shankar Balasubramanian,
University of Cambridge, UK) was transformed into BL21(DE3) competent cells
(Stratagene), which were cultured in TY media (1.6% tryptone peptone,
1% yeast extract and 0.5% NaCl) and
50 μg ml−1
kanamycin. BG4 antibody expression was induced with 0.5 mM isopropyl
β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside for 3 h at
37 °C. The cells were lysed in TES buffer (50 mM
Tris-Cl pH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA and 20% sucrose) on ice for
10 min, diluted twofold in water, and left on ice for a further
10 min prior to centrifugation at 10,000g at
4 °C for 30 min. The supernatant was filtered
(0.2 μm) and purified on a HIS-Select Nickel Affinity
column (Sigma). The column was washed in 10 mM imidazole pH 8.0 in
PBS, and BG4 antibody eluted in 250 mM imidazole pH 8.0 in PBS. BG4
antibody was concentrated and buffer exchanged into PBS in an Amicon Ultra-15
Centrifugal Filter Unit (Millipore). The concentration of BG4 was determined
using Thermo Scientific Pierce BCA Protein Assay kit, and the antibody was
stored at −20 °C.
Cell synchronization and short interfering RNA (siRNA)
transfection
HEK293T mid-S-phase cell synchronization was performed using cells released from
a thymidine/aphidicolin block as previously described49. Dyskerin
knockdown was performed by reverse transfecting 120 pmol of
Invitrogen custom-designed Stealth siRNA targeting either the dyskerin
3′ untranslated region (siDKC#1,
5′-AAGGCCACUUGAAGCUGGAGGAGAA-3′) or
the coding region (siDKC#2,
5′-GGCCAAGATTATGCTTCCAGGTGTT-3′).
Cells were transfected using Life Technologies Lipofectamine RNAiMAX
Transfection Reagent. Qiagen All Stars negative-control siRNA was used as a
siRNA control.
Immunofluorescence and telomere/telomerase FISH
Immunofluorescence and FISH for telomeres and telomerase RNA (hTR) were performed
as described49, with the following modifications. Cytoplasm was
removed by incubating slides in cytoplasmic extraction buffer (20 mM
HEPES-KOH, pH 7.9, 20 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2,
300 mM sucrose and 0.5% (v/v) NP-40) for 10 min
with no shaking. Slides were washed once with PBS+0.1%
Tween-20, once with PBS and then fixed in 2% paraformaldehyde in PBS
for 20 min. Cells were washed with PBS then incubated in
0.1% Triton X-100 in PBS for 10 min, followed by rinsing
twice in PBS. Slides were ethanol dehydrated with 70%
(2 min), 90% (2 min) and 100%
ethanol (2 min) followed by air drying prior to overlaying with
30 μl of FISH buffer containing 5 ng each of
five Alexa Fluor 488-labelled anti-hTRoligonucleotides and 5 ng of
Texas Red-labelled telomere probe49. Slides were heated to
80 °C for 3 min and incubated in a humidified
chamber overnight at 37 °C and washed49.
Slides were refixed in 2% paraformaldehyde in PBS, washed as before
and overlaid with phosphate-buffered gelatin49 for
1 h. Slides were incubated with BG4 primary antibody
(600 nM) for 1 h at 37 °C, washed four
times for 5 min with PBS+0.01% Tween-20 and then
overlaid with secondary antibody (Rabbit anti-DYKDDDDK Tag Antibody, Cell
Signalling; 1:800 dilution) for 1 h at 37 °C.
Cells were washed as before and a fluorescently labelled tertiary antibody
(Alexa Fluor 647 Donkey Anti-Rabbit IgG (H+L) Antibody, Life
Technologies; 1:1,000 dilution) was overlaid at 37 °C for
30 min, washed as before and counterstained with
4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole. Staining was visualized at RT on a
Zeiss Axio Imager M1 microscope, with a Plan-Apochromat × 63 oil
objective (numerical aperture, 1.4), and an AxioCam MR digital camera (Carl
Zeiss) with consistent exposure times between experiments. For presentation
purposes, pixel intensity histograms were adjusted in Axiovision (Carl Zeiss),
equally across all figure panels, and images were cropped in Adobe
Photoshop.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Moye, A. L. et al. Telomeric G-quadruplexes
are a substrate and site of localization for human telomerase. Nat. Commun.
6:7643 doi: 10.1038/ncomms8643 (2015).
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