Mutations in the clk-2 gene of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans affect organismal features such as development, behavior, reproduction, and aging as well as cellular features such as the cell cycle, apoptosis, the DNA replication checkpoint, and telomere length. clk-2 encodes a novel protein (CLK-2) with a unique homologue in each of the sequenced eukaryotic genomes. We have studied the human homologue of CLK-2 (hCLK2) to determine whether it affects the same set of cellular features as CLK-2. We find that overexpression of hCLK2 decreases cell cycle length and that inhibition of hCLK2 expression arrests the cell cycle reversibly. Overexpression of hCLK2, however, renders the cell hypersensitive to apoptosis triggered by oxidative stress or DNA replication block and gradually increases telomere length. The evolutionary conservation of the pattern of cellular functions affected by CLK-2 suggests that the function of hCLK2 in humans might also affect the same organismal features as in worms, including life span. Surprisingly, we find that hCLK2 is present in all cellular compartments and exists as a membrane-associated as well as a soluble form.Identifying and studying the processes and the genes that are involved in determining the rate of aging is a challenging area of modern genetics. In particular, it would be of interest to determine whether the activity of specific genes limits human life span. Several epidemiological studies of centenarians are being carried out with this goal in mind under the hypothesis that there might be a genetic basis for the exceptional life span of very long lived individuals (1). However, given the pervasive evolutionary conservation of physiological processes among organisms, a practical approach to find genes that might be involved in human aging is to first investigate the genetic basis of aging in lower organisms. The nematode genetic model system, Caenorhabditis elegans, is being extensively used to this end, and a number of genes that have been identified in this organism for their effect on aging are now also being studied in vertebrates (2, 3).The clk-2 mutants of C. elegans display a pleiotropic phenotype (reviewed in Ref. 4) that includes a slowing down of numerous physiological processes, including embryonic and postembryonic development, behavioral rates, and reproduction (5). clk-2 mutants also show an increase in life span that is particularly dramatic in combination with mutations in other genes, such as clk-1 and daf-2 (2, 6). The clk-2 mutations are temperature-sensitive (5, 7) and at 25°C produce a lethal embryonic phenotype resulting in differentiated but highly disorganized embryos (5). This is likely to be the null phenotype, since it is also produced by RNA interference at all temperatures. Extensive temperature shift experiments have demonstrated that clk-2 is required for embryonic development only during a narrow time window in which oocyte maturation, fertilization, the completion of meiosis, and the initiation of embryonic development occurs (5). Howev...