Telomeres are essential structures that cap the end of chromosomes, which is required for maintenance of chromosomal stability, cell viability and the capacity of cells to proliferate. A complex of specific telomere-binding proteins (TRF1, TRF2, POT1, TIN2, TPP1 and RAP1), also known as the Shelterin complex, is essential for telomere capping by assisting the formation of tertiary telomeric structures.1 Gene mutations in components of the Shelterin complex (hTIN2, hPOT1 and hTPP1) lead to bone marrow failure and cancer formation in human genetic diseases including dyskeratosis congenita (DC), which is caused by Tin2 mutation in 20% of the cases.2, 3 All known TIN2 mutations are heterozygous, autosomal-dominant and patients normally show extremely short telomeres. In addition, mutations in the telomere binding protein POT1 were shown to lead to lymphocytic leukaemia formation.4 Aside from genetic diseases, a variety of studies reported reduced expression of telomere-binding proteins in human cancers compared with non-cancerous tissue suggesting that downregulation of the expression of telomere-binding proteins may also contribute to carcinogenesis in somatic cells and tissues.5, 6 It was shown that Epstein–Barr virus-encoded LMP1 and Epstein–Barr virus-infection itself induce the downregulation of TRF1, TRF2 and POT1 at the transcriptional and translational level resulting in complex chromosomal aberrations, alternative lengthening of telomeres and the induction of Hodgkin's lymphoma.7, 8
The causal relation between gene dosage reductions of telomere binding protein and the development of cancer and tissue aging remains elusive. Mouse knockout studies revealed that homozygous deletions of Tin2 or Trf1 lead to early embryonic lethality.9, 10 The conditional homozygous deletion of Trf1 was shown to provoke severe defects in tissue maintenance11 and in combination with homozygous p53 deletion led to cancer formation in skin.12 However, these models did not address the question of whether moderate reductions in the gene dose of telomere-binding proteins contribute to tissue aging and/or carcinogenesis. To address this question we followed aging cohorts of mice carrying heterozygous deletion of Trf1 and/or Tin2 in comparison with wild-type mice.9, 10
Heterozygous Trf1+/−Tin2+/− knockout mice showed a 40–50% reduction in the mRNA expression level of Trf1 and Tin2, but had no effect on the mRNA expression profile of other telomere-binding proteins (Figures 1a and b, Supplementary Figures 1a and d). Protein analysis of whole-spleen extracts revealed an ~50% reduced Tin2 expression in Tin2+/− mice compared with Tin2+/+ mice (Figure 1c, Supplementary Figure 1e). Trusty antibodies for detection of endogenous Trf1 protein in tissues are still lacking. To monitor the Trf1 protein amounts in Trf1 heterozygous mice, a Trf1 hemagglutinin (HA)-tag knockin mouse line was generated carrying the HA-tag at the N-terminus of the endogenous Trf1 gene locus. Opposed to the homozygous Trf1 knockout mouse, homozygous HA-Trf1 knockin mice (Trf1ki/ki) are viable, do not exhibit an overt organismal phenotype and show normal telomere structure indicating that the HA-tag did not interfere with Trf1 function. Trf1 protein from the knockin mice was quantitatively immunoprecipitated with an anti-HA antibody using equally concentrated lysates. Heterozygous Trf1 deletion led to a reduction in Trf1 protein amounts, whereas the heterozygous deletion of Tin2 had no significant impact on Trf1 protein levels (Figure 1d; Supplementary Figure 1f). As Trf1 binds directly to Tin2, the heterozygous Trf1 knockout mice (Trf1ki/− Tin2+/+) also exhibited a reduction in the amount of Trf1-bound Tin2 compared with Trf1ki/ki Tin2+/+ mice (Figure 1d; Supplementary Figure 1f).
Immuno-fluorescence in situ hybridization staining of telomeres and telomere-binding proteins revealed that heterozygous deletion of Trf1 reduces the co-localization of Trf1 with telomeric DNA in Trf1+/− mice and in Trf1+/−Tin2+/− mice compared with Trf1+/+ control and Tin2+/− mice (Figures 1e and f). Since Trf1 mediates binding of Tin2 at telomeres, heterozygous deletion of Trf1 also led to a reduced binding of Tin2 protein at telomeres compared to wild-type controls (Figures 1e and g). Heterozygous deletion of Tin2 reduced Tin2 localization at telomeres compared to wild-type mice but in agreement with the fact that Trf1 binds directly to telomeres Tin2 deletion did not affect Trf1 expression at telomeres (Figures 1e and f). The heterozygous gene deletions of Tin2 and/or Trf1 did not affect the Rap1 localization at telomeres, which is known to bind directly to telomeres in mammalian cells or through its interaction with Trf2 (Supplementary Figures 1g and h). Together, the data on protein expression showed that the heterozygous deletion of Trf1 and/or Tin2 lead to reduction of Trf1 and/or Tin2 expression and to reduced localization of the proteins at telomeres in murine cells and tissues.
Cohorts of single heterozygous knockout mice (Tin2+/−, n=21 and Trf1+/−, n=32), double heterozygous knockout mice Trf1+/−Tin2+/− (n=33) and wild-type mice (Tin2+/+, Trf1+/+, n=26) were weekly monitored during aging and exhibited no overt premature aging phenotype (Figure 1h). Analysis of the bone marrow of a cohort of mice at the age of 14–16 months did not reveal evidence for bone marrow failure. Specifically, the Tin2 and/or Trf1 gene status did not affect the number of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells in bone marrow (Figure 1i; Supplementary Figure 1i). Mice were humanly killed when showing >15% of weight loss during aging or other apparent abnormalities (wounds and tumors). Knockout animals exhibited increased incidence of tumors infiltration of spleen, liver and lymph nodes. Kaplan–Meier analysis of tumor-free survival revealed a significant increase in tumor formation in the three cohorts of heterozygous and double-heterozygous knockout mice compared with the wild-type cohort (Figure 1j; Supplementary Figure 1j). Specifically, the analysis indicated that tumor formation in the heterozygous knockout cohorts was accelerated and occurred significantly earlier in life compared with the wild-type cohort.
Overall, 83.3% of the aged wild-type mice were free of tumors when humanly sacrificed due to aging characteristics. Histological analysis of macroscopic tumors revealed that in the wild-type cohort 13.3% of the mice had malignant tumors and 3% carried hyperplastic tumor nodules (Figure 1k). In contrast, 68% (60–76%) of the mice from single or double heterozygous knockout cohorts developed macroscopic tumors including malignant tumors in 54% of the mice (52–56%) and the percentage of hyperplasia was increased to an average of 14% (6.7–20%, Figure 1k). Histological analysis of five representative malignant tumors of Trf1+/−Tin2+/− mice indicated that the majority of the malignant tumors were T- or B-cell lymphoma (Supplementary Figure 1k). Aside from the increased overall frequency, there was no significant shift in the spectrum of tumors in heterozygous or double-heterozygous knockout mice compared with the wild-type cohort.
Studies on telomerase deficient mice indicated that telomere shortening leads to an increase in chromosomal instability and tumor initiation.13 To analyze whether such mechanisms were involved in accelerating tumor formation in response to heterozygous deletion of telomere-binding proteins, we studied telomere stability and DNA damage at telomeres in bone marrow derived metaphase spreads of 14–16-month-old mice. Telomere length analysis showed shortening of telomeres from double heterozygous Trf1+/−Tin2+/− mice compared with wild-type mice (Figure 2a). In addition, telomeric fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis revealed increases in (i) broken telomeres (Figures 2b and c) and (ii) multi-telomeric signals (Figures 2b and d), both are markers of fragile telomeres and replication stress. Moreover, sister chromatid exchange rates at telomeres (another feature of fragile telomeres) were increased in Trf1+/− and Tin2+/− as well as in double heterozygous mouse embryonic fibroblasts compared with wild-type mouse embryonic fibroblasts (Figures 2e and f). To analyze whether telomere fragility would also lead to an accumulation of DNA damage, the number of 53BP1 DNA damage foci was analyzed in small intestine of 14–16-month-old mice. There was a significant increase in the number of intestinal epithelial cells in basal crypts harboring 53BP1+ DNA damage foci in the heterozygous mutant cohorts compared with control mice (Figures 2g and h). Immunohistochemical staining against phosphorylated H2AX (γH2AX—another marker for DNA breaks) confirmed these results (Figures 2i and j). Co-labeling of telomeres and γH2AX foci revealed a significant increase in telomere-induced DNA damage foci (TIFs) in the heterozygous knockout cohorts compared with wild-type controls (Figures 2k and l).
Together, the current study provides the first experimental evidence that heterozygous gene deletion reduces the binding of Trf1 and Tin2 proteins at telomeres resulting in telomere fragility, DNA damage accumulation and enhanced lymphoma formation in aging mice, but not in premature aging per se. These results indicate that a tight control of the expression level of telomere-binding proteins is important to avoid tumor formation, but premature failure in organ homeostasis of patients carrying heterozygous TIN2 mutations likely involves gain of function or dominant negative effects of the mutant alleles as drivers of organ failure. Recent findings on reduced expression of telomere-binding proteins, telomere uncapping and increases in sister chromatid exchange rates in human lymphoma and in response to Epstein–Barr virus infection of human B-lymphocytes suggest that the results from this study are relevant for the development of human hematopoietic malignancies.7, 14, 15 Alterations in the expression level of telomere-binding proteins could represent an alternative, telomere length independent route to telomere dysfunction, which in turn induces hematopoietic malignancies.
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Acknowledgements
We gratefully acknowledge Titia de Lange (Rockefeller University, NY, USA) for kind donation of antibodies and TRF1 deficient mice, Jeffrey Chiang and Richard Hodes for providing Tin2 knockout mice, as well as Leticia Quintanilla-Fend (University of Tübingen, Germany) for assistance with the lymphoma classification. This work was supported by the DFG (Ru745-10, RU-745-12), the European Union (ERC-2012-AdG 323136), the BMBF (GerontoSys—SyStaR 315894), the state of Thuringia, and intramural funds from the Leibniz association.
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KLR and KH designed the research; KH, AI, FL and AB performed the research; KH, AI and FL analyzed the data; KH and KLR wrote the paper.
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Hartmann, K., Illing, A., Leithäuser, F. et al. Gene dosage reductions of Trf1 and/or Tin2 induce telomere DNA damage and lymphoma formation in aging mice. Leukemia 30, 749–753 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/leu.2015.173
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/leu.2015.173
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