Telomere maintenance activity is a hallmark of cancer. In some telomerase-negative tumors, telomeres become lengthened by alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT), a recombination-mediated DNA replication process in which telomeres use other telomeric DNA as a copy template. Using chromosome orientation fluorescence in situ hybridization, we found that postreplicative exchange events involving a telomere and another TTAGGG-repeat tract occur at remarkably high frequencies in ALT cells (range 28 -280/100 metaphases) and rarely or never in non-ALT cells, including cell lines with very long telomeres. Like the ALT phenotype itself, the telomeric exchanges were not suppressed when telomerase was activated in ALT cells. These exchanges are telomere specific because there was no correlation with sister chromatid exchange rates at interstitial locations, and they were not observed in non-ALT Bloom syndrome cells with very high sister chromatid exchange rates.
We report the isolation of 10 differentially expressed cDNAs in the process of apoptosis induced by the p53 tumor suppressor. As a global analytical method, we performed a differential display of mRNA between mouse Ml myeloid leukemia cells and derived clone LTR6 cells, which contain a stably transfected temperature-sensitive mutant of p53. At 32°C wild-type p53 function is activated in LTR6 cells, resulting in programmed cell death.
Developmentally regulated genes in Drosophila, which are conserved through evolution, are potential candidates for key functions in biological processes such as cell cycle, programmed cell death, and cancer. We report cloning and characterization of the human homologue of the Drosophila seven in absentia gene (HUMSIAH), which codes for a 282 amino acids putative zinc finger protein. HUMSIAH is localized on human chromosome 16ql2-ql3. This gene is activated during the physiological program of cell death in the intestinal epithelium. Moreover, human cancer-derived cells selected for suppression of their tumorigenic phenotype exhibit constitutively elevated levels of HUMSIAH mRNA. A similar pattern of expression is also displayed by the p2lwan. These results suggest that mammalian seven in absentia gene, which is a target for activation by p53, may play a role in apoptosis and tumor suppression.
Telomeres are important structures for DNA replication and chromosome stability during cell growth. Telomere length has been correlated with the division potential of human cells and has been found to decrease with age in healthy individuals. Nevertheless, telomere lengths within the same cell are heterogeneous and certain chromosome arms typically have either short or long telomeres. Both the origin and the physiological consequences of this heterogeneity in telomere length remain unknown. In this study we used quantitative telomeric FISH combined with a method to identify the parental origin of chromosomes to show that significant differences in relative telomere intensities are frequently observed between chromosomal homologs in short-term stimulated cultures of peripheral blood lymphocytes. These differences appear to be stable for at least 4 months in vivo, but disappear after prolonged proliferation in vitro. The telomere length differences are also stable during in vitro growth of telomerase-negative fibroblast cells but can be abolished by exogenous telomerase expression in these cells. These findings suggest the existence of a mechanism maintaining differences in telomere length between chromosome homologs that is independent of telomere length itself.
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