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Title

Telomere Length Homeostasis Responds to Changes in Intracellular dNTP Pools.

Authors

Gupta, Amitabha; Sharma, Sushma; Reichenbach, Patrick; Marjavaara, Lisette; Nilsson, Anna Karin; Lingner, Joachim; Chabes, Andrei; Rothstein, Rodney; Chang, Michael

Abstract

Telomeres, the ends of linear eukaryotic chromosomes, shorten due to incomplete DNA replication and nucleolytic degradation. Cells counteract this shortening by employing a specialized reverse transcriptase called telomerase, which uses deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs) to extend telomeres. Intracellular dNTP levels are tightly regulated, and perturbation of these levels is known to affect DNA synthesis. We examined whether altering the levels of the dNTP pools or changing the relative ratios of the four dNTPs in Saccharomyces cerevisiae would affect the length of the telomeres. Lowering dNTP levels leads to a modest shortening of telomeres, while increasing dNTP pools has no significant effect on telomere length. Strikingly, altering the ratio of the four dNTPs dramatically affects telomere length homeostasis, both positively and negatively. Specifically, we find that intracellular deoxyguanosine triphosphate (dGTP) levels positively correlate with both telomere length and telomerase nucleotide addition proc-essivity in vivo. Our findings are consistent with in vitro data showing dGTP-dependent stimulation of telomerase activity in multiple organisms and suggest that telomerase activity is modulated in vivo by dGTP levels.

Subjects

TELOMERES; HOMEOSTASIS; SACCHAROMYCES cerevisiae; DNA polymerases; POLYMERASES

Publication

Genetics, 2013, Vol 193, Issue 4, p1095

ISSN

0016-6731

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1534/genetics.112.149120

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