Brief Communication abstract


Nature Cell Biology 4, 731 - 736 (2002)
Published online: 27 August 2002 | doi:10.1038/ncb846

Subnuclear shuttling of human telomerase induced by transformation and DNA damage

Judy M. Y. Wong1, Leonard Kusdra1 & Kathleen Collins1

Top

The telomerase ribonucleoprotein complex caps chromosome ends by adding telomeric repeats. Here we show that catalytically active human telomerase has a regulated intranuclear localization that is dependent on the cell-cycle stage, transformation and DNA damage. In primary cell lines, low expression of a fusion protein of green fluorescent protein and telomerase reverse transcriptase (GFP–hTERT) increases telomerase activity and stabilizes the maintenance of telomere length. Confocal microscopy shows that the release of telomerase to the nucleoplasm from sequestration at nucleolar sites is enhanced at the expected time of telomere replication. By contrast, in tumour and transformed cells, there is an almost complete dissociation of telomerase from nucleoli at all stages of the cell cycle. Transfection of the simian virus 40 genome into a primary cell line is sufficient to mobilize telomerase from nucleoli to the nucleoplasm. Conversely, ionizing radiation induces the reassociation of telomerase with nucleoli in both primary and transformed cells. These findings show that transformation and DNA damage have opposite effects on the cellular regulation of active telomerase, affecting the enzyme's access to both telomeric and nontelomeric substrates.

Top
  1. Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-3204, USA

Correspondence to: Kathleen Collins1 e-mail: kcollins@socrates.berkeley.edu



MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS
These links to content published by NPG are automatically generated

REVIEWS
Telomerase is not an oncogene
Oncogene Reviews (18 Jan 2002)
 See all 3 matches for Reviews

NEWS AND VIEWS
Keeping telomerase in its place
Nature Medicine News and Views (01 Sep 2002)

RESEARCH
POT1 as a terminal transducer of TRF1 telomere length control
Nature Letters to Editor (26 Jun 2003)
TIN2, a new regulator of telomere length in human cells
Nature Genetics Article (01 Dec 1999)
Common and reversible regulation of wild-type p53 function and of ribosomal biogenesis by protein kinases in human cells
Oncogene Original Article (21 Sep 2001)
 See all 12 matches for Research


Extra navigation

Subscribe to Nature Cell Biology

Subscribe

Open Innovation Challenges

naturejobs