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Publication : Distinct dosage requirements for the maintenance of long and short telomeres in mTert heterozygous mice.

First Author  Erdmann N Year  2004
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  101
Issue  16 Pages  6080-5
PubMed ID  15079066 Mgi Jnum  J:89591
Mgi Id  MGI:3040766 Doi  10.1073/pnas.0401580101
Citation  Erdmann N, et al. (2004) Distinct dosage requirements for the maintenance of long and short telomeres in mTert heterozygous mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101(16):6080-5
abstractText  Telomerase is a ribonucleoprotein containing an essential telomerase RNA template and telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) that maintains telomeres. The dosage requirements for mammalian TERT in telomere length homeostasis are not known, but are of importance in cellular senescence, stem cell renewal, and cancer. Here, we characterize telomere maintenance and function upon successive breeding of mice deficient in mTert. These studies reveal a unique dosage requirement for telomere length maintenance by TERT; despite haploinsufficiency for the maintenance of long telomeres, mTert+/- mice retain minimal telomere DNA at all chromosome ends and do not exhibit the infertility typical of telomerase-deficient strains. Unlike the long (>50 kbp) average telomere lengths of wild-type laboratory mice, mTert+/- animals mice possess short telomere lengths similar to humans and wild-derived mice. Unexpectedly, mTert+/- mice are ersatz carriers for genetic instability, because their mating led to accelerated genetic instability and infertility in null progeny. Thus, limiting TERT levels play a key role in the maintenance of genome integrity, with important ramifications for the maintenance of short telomeres in human cancer and aging.
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