Publication:

Telomere shortening triggers a p53-dependent cell cycle arrest via accumulation of G-rich single stranded DNA fragments (1999)

Author(s): Saretzki G, Sitte N, Merkel U, Wurm RE, von Zglinicki T

    Abstract: It has been repeatedly suspected that telomere shortening might be one possible trigger of the p53-dependent cell cycle arrest, although the mechanism of this arrest remained unclear. Telomeres in human cells under mild oxidative stress accumulate single-strand damage faster than interstitial repetitive sequences. In MRC-5 ®bro-blasts and U87 glioblastoma cells, which both express wild-type p53, oxidative stress-mediated production of single-strand damage in telomeres is concomitant to the accumulation of p53 and p21 and to cell cycle arrest. This response can be modeled by treatment of cells with short single stranded telomeric G-rich DNA fragments. The arrest is transient in U87 cells. Recovery from it is accompanied by up-regulation of telomerase activity and elongation of telomeres. Overexpression of mutated p53 is sufficient to reverse the phenotype of inhibition as well as the delayed activation of telomerase. These data suggest that the production of G-rich single stranded fragments during the course of telomere shortening is sufficient to trigger a p53 dependent cell cycle arrest.

      • Date: 1999
      • Journal: Oncogene
      • Volume: 18
      • Issue: 37
      • Pages: 5148-5158
      • Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
      • Publication type: Article
      • Bibliographic status: Published

      Keywords: telomeres; p53; check point; cell cycle; DNA damage

      Staff

      Dr Gabriele Saretzki
      Lecturer

      Professor Thomas von Zglinicki
      Professor of Cellular Gerontology