Article
- The EMBO Journal (2002) 21, 4338 - 4348
- doi:10.1093/emboj/cdf433
Subject Categories:
Different telomere damage signaling pathways in human and mouse cells
Agata Smogorzewska1 and Titia de Lange1
- Laboratory for Cell Biology and Genetics, The Rockefeller University, 1230 York Avenue, NY 10021, USA
Correspondence to:
Titia de Lange, E-mail: delange@mail.rockefeller.edu
Received 9 April 2002; Accepted 1 July 2002; Revised 20 June 2002
Abstract
Programmed telomere shortening in human somatic cells is thought to act as a tumor suppressor pathway, limiting the replicative potential of developing tumor cells. Critically short human telomeres induce senescence either by activating p53 or by inducing the p16/RB pathway, and suppression of both pathways is required to suppress senescence of aged human cells. Here we report that removal of TRF2 from human telomeres and the ensuing de-protection of chromosome ends induced immediate premature senescence. Although the telomeric tracts remained intact, the TRF2
B
M-induced premature senescence was indistinguishable from replicative senescence and could be mediated by either the p53 or the p16/RB pathway. Telomere de-protection also induced a growth arrest and senescent morphology in mouse cells. However, in this setting the loss of p53 function was sufficient to completely abrogate the arrest, indicating that the p16/RB response to telomere dysfunction is not active in mouse cells. These findings reveal a fundamental difference in telomere damage signaling in human and mouse cells that bears on the use of mouse models for the telomere tumor suppressor pathway.
Keywords:
- p53,
- RB,
- telomere,
- TRF2,
- tumor suppressor



