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First published online February 21, 2007
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/jcs.03397
Hypothesis |
Department of Molecular Genetics, U.T. M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: schang{at}manderson.org)
Accepted 5 December 2006
| Summary |
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Key words: Werner Syndrome, Telomere, DNA damage, Aging, Cancer
| Introduction |
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10 per million individuals (Epstein et al., 1966
Cloning of WRN ten years ago revealed that it encodes a protein containing a highly conserved 3' to 5' DNA helicase domain of the RecQ family (reviewed by Martin and Oshima, 2000
). RecQ helicase family members are involved in diverse biochemical processes, including DNA recombination, replication and repair, and WRN has been implicated in all of these (reviewed by Hickson, 2003
). WRN also possesses several other conserved domains, including a 3' to 5' exonuclease domain, a nuclear localization sequence, and a multifunctional DNA/protein-binding domain (DPBD) that interacts with both DNA and proteins (reviewed by Orren, 2006
). Through these domains WRN interacts with many factors that participate in diverse aspects of DNA metabolism beyond the scope of this commentary. Here, we focus on recent progress that indicates WRN might have a role at telomeres. Discussion of other aspects of WRN biology can be found elsewhere (Hickson, 2003
; Comai and Li, 2004
; Bohr, 2005
; Orren, 2006
).
| Telomere structure and maintenance |
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The telomeric t-loop is bound and stabilized by several telomere-specific binding proteins that form a complex, termed the telosome (Liu et al., 2004b
) or shelterin (de Lange, 2005
). This complex is composed of six core components: the duplex telomere-binding proteins TRF1 and TRF2, the single-stranded TTAGGG-repeat binding protein POT1 and the adapter proteins RAP1, TIN2 and TPP1 (Fig. 1). TRF1 is a negative regulator of telomere length (van Steensel and de Lange, 1997
) and TRF2 is essential for telomere end protection (van Steensel et al., 1998
; Celli and de Lange, 2005
). Recent evidence suggests that the TRF1 and TRF2 complexes interact with each other to regulate telomere dynamics (Kim et al., 2004
; Liu et al., 2004a
; Liu et al., 2004b
; Ye et al., 2004
; Wu et al., 2006
), and this may be mediated by POT1. POT1 is a negative regulator of telomere length, since reduction of endogenous POT1 levels or overexpression of a mutant POT1 that cannot bind telomeres results in telomere length elongation (Loayza and de Lange, 2003
; Liu et al., 2004a
; Ye et al., 2004
).
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| Telomere dysfunction and replicative senescence |
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-galactosidase (SA-
-gal) activity (reviewed by Campisi, 2005
Stochastic inactivation of p53 and pRB by antisense oligos (Hara et al., 1991
) or by viral oncoproteins (Shay et al., 1991
) can bypass replicative senescence to extend replicative potential, which drives additional telomere erosion and culminates in a period of massive cell death and rampant chromosomal instability termed `crisis' (Counter et al., 1992
). Dysfunctional telomeres are highly recombinogenic, leading to chromosomal breakage-fusion-bridge cycles that are potentially cancer promoting (Chang et al., 2003
; O'Hagan et al., 2002
). Depending on how fused chromosomes are resolved, it has been hypothesized that loss of heterozygosity or gene amplification could result in tumorigenesis (Chin et al., 2004
). Indeed, it now appears that many human precancerous lesions progress through a phase of genomic instability likely to be generated in part by dysfunctional telomeres (Bartkova et al., 2005
; Gorgoulis et al., 2005
). Activation of a telomere-maintenance mechanism is thus crucial for tumor progression. This is achieved by the reactivation of telomerase in approximately 90% of human carcinomas, whereas the remainder maintains telomere length by a recombination-based mechanism termed Alternative Lengthening of Telomeres (ALT) (Kim et al., 1994
; Bryan et al., 1997
; Shay and Bacchetti, 1997
). Telomere maintenance thus appears to be crucial for the formation of human tumors, removing the short telomeric barrier to tumor progression.
| Replicative senescence and human aging |
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It is postulated that senescent cells accumulate with normal aging and may contribute to age-related pathologies by inhibiting tissue regenerative capacities (Krtolica and Campisi, 2002
; Itahana et al., 2001
). Increasing evidence suggests that senescent cells do accumulate in aging human tissues. For example, SA-
-gal-positive senescent cells have been identified in aged liver, atherosclerotic plaques, and skin (Dimri et al., 1995
; Vasile et al., 2001
). Perhaps the best evidence that senescent cells exist in vivo comes from studies of aging baboon skin. Approximately 15% of aged baboon skin fibroblasts possess prominent foci of DNA damage markers, including
-H2AX, 53-BP1 and phosphorylated Ataxia-telangiectasia-mutated (ATM) kinase that colocalize with telomeres, indicating that telomeres are dysfunctional in aging skin (Herbig et al., 2006
). These results suggest that in old primates, telomere dysfunction activates the ATM-dependent DNA-damage signaling pathway to initiate cellular senescence in tissues, probably negatively impacting upon tissue physiology and function.
| Cellular stress response and telomere dysfunction in WS fibroblasts |
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An important contributor to cellular stress in replicating primary cells is the presence of dysfunctional telomeres, which directly elicit a DNA-damage response to initiate cellular senescence (d'Adda di Fagagna et al., 2003
; Takai et al., 2003
). The observation that premature senescence characteristic of WS cells can be rescued by ectopic expression of telomerase suggests a crucial role for telomere integrity in the pathogenesis of WS (Wyllie et al., 2000
; Choi et al., 2001
; Crabbe et al., 2004
). Recent evidence suggests that the elevated genomic instability characteristic of WS fibroblasts stems directly from increased telomere loss, which can be rescued by overexpression of telomerase (Crabbe et al., 2007
). However, sensitive single telomere length analyses reveal that telomeres in WS cells erode at rates similar to those of normal controls (Baird et al., 2004
), which suggests that accelerated global telomere attrition is not a mechanism that generates dysfunctional telomeres in WS cells. Rather, WS fibroblasts may be particularly sensitive to the presence of a few dysfunctional telomeres that arise stochastically owing to the loss of WRN function at telomeres, since even a single dysfunctional telomere is sufficient to limit cell survival in vivo (Hemann et al., 2001
). As discussed below, WRN may be required for proper capping of telomeres by the telosome/shelterin complex as well as for replication of lagging telomeric DNA. Loss of WRN could therefore elicit the formation of dysfunctional telomeres that help drive entry into premature cellular senescence.
| The role of WRN at telomeres |
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| TRF1 and TRF2 |
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| POT1 |
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| Ku70/80 |
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| WRN is required for telomere metabolism |
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-H2AX, 53BP1, NBS1 and CHK2, many of which colocalize with dysfunctional telomeres (d'Adda di Fagagna et al., 2003
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| The mTerc/ Wrn/ compound mutant mouse as a model of human WS |
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Interestingly, despite the wide-ranging activities of the WRN helicase in human cells, Wrn-null mice do not exhibit any cellular or clinical phenotypes characteristic of human WS (Lombard et al., 2000
). The observations that WRN is required for telomere maintenance, and that laboratory mice normally possess very long telomeres, suggest that manifestation of premature aging phenotypes in Wrn-null mice may require the presence of critically short telomeres. This hypothesis has since received genetic support from studies of mice lacking both telomerase and Wrn (Chang et al., 2004
; Du et al., 2004
). Strikingly, these late generation mTerc/ Wrn/ mice display clinical symptoms resembling human WS, including early onset of age-related disorders such as defective wound repair, osteoporosis and skeletal fractures, hypogonadism, cataract formation, type II diabetes, an elevated incidence of mesenchymal cancers compared with the general population as well as premature death (Chang et al., 2004
; Du et al., 2004
). Quantitative telomere-fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) revealed that chromosomes from late generation mTerc/ Wrn/ mice display an elevated loss in overall telomere length that correlates with increased chromosomal fusions and nonreciprocal translocations (NRTs) (Chang et al., 2004
; Du et al., 2004
). Late generation mTerc/ Wrn/ mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs) exhibit prominent DNA-damage markers such as 53BP1 and
H2AX and a profound reduction in replicative lifespan (Chang et al., 2004
), which is similar to growth defects observed in human WS fibroblasts.
Dysfunctional telomeres thus appear to cooperate with Wrn deficiency to activate the DNA-damage response and subsequent entry into replicative senescence. It is important to emphasize that the phenotype observed in the mTerc/ Wrn/ double mutant is not simply a worsening of aging phenotypes observed in the telomerase-null mouse, but a recapitulation of specific phenotypes encountered in WS patients that are not observed in late generation mTerc/ mice. Data from these mouse models therefore strongly support the hypothesis that manifestation of the diverse pathophysiological phenotypes observed in WS patients requires both the presence of dysfunctional telomeres as well as WRN deficiency.
| Elevated homologous recombination at telomeres and engagement of the ALT pathway in mTerc/ Wrn/ cells |
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Given the elevated number of chromosomal aberrations and robust DNA-damage response observed in organs and cells derived from late generation mTerc/ Wrn/ mice, it is tempting to speculate that a key factor underlying WS may be the inability of WS cells to suppress elevated genomic instability. When p53 is lost, the genomic instability induced by dysfunctional telomeres can provide a mutator mechanism enabling would-be cancer cells to achieve a threshold of cancer-promoting changes required for tumorigenesis (Artandi et al., 2000
; Rudolph et al., 1999
; O'Hagan et al., 2002
). To understand the impact of Wrn deficiency on telomere maintenance, chromosomal stability and tumorigenesis, we allowed G5 mTerc/ Wrn/ mouse cell lines to undergo spontaneous cellular senescence. Surprisingly, loss of Wrn in this setting promoted escape from cellular senescence and the emergence of immortalized clones in which the p53 pathway is compromised (Laud et al., 2005
). These clones continue to shorten their telomeres and exhibit marked chromosomal aberrations. However, telomere sister chromatid exchange (T-SCE), an indicator of homologous recombination (HR) between sister telomeres, specifically increases in these cells (Fig. 3). Restoration of wild-type, but not helicase dead, WRN to G5 mTerc/ Wrn/ cell lines decreases T-SCE levels, which suggests that the helicase domain of WRN is required to repress inappropriate telomeric recombination. Sgs1 represses recombination at homeologous sequences (Myung et al., 2001
; Sugawara et al., 2004
), and this observation is consistent with a role for WRN in repressing HR at homeologous telomeric sequences. The observation that human ALT cell lines also display elevated T-SCE (Bechter et al., 2004
; Londono-Vallejo et al., 2004
) suggests that HR-mediated telomere recombination mechanisms are important prerequisites for transition to the ALT phenotype.
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When immortalized G5 mTerc/ Wrn/ clones are injected subcutaneously into severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice, aberrant telomeric HR, coupled with the strong selective pressure to maintain telomere length in the absence of telomerase activity, results in the activation of ALT and rapid formation of tumors (Laud et al., 2005
). T-SCE levels in ALT tumor cell lines are not repressed when telomerase is expressed in these cells, which is consistent with previous observations indicating that once ALT is activated, it is not normally repressible by telomerase expression (Cerone et al., 2001
; Perrem et al., 2001
; Londono-Vallejo et al., 2004
). These results indicate that the increased incidence of chromosomal instability and cancer observed in WS patients may be caused by aberrant recombination at telomeres, which promotes the activation of ALT that maintains telomeres through a mechanism analogous to the type I survival pathway observed in sgsl/, telomerase-null yeasts. Although not all Wrn/, telomerase-null human cells maintain telomeres by this mechanism, the recent discovery of a Wrn/, telomerase-null SV40-immortalized ALT cell line that maintains telomeres in a manner reminiscent of the type I survival pathway supports this hypothesis (Fasching et al., 2005
; Marciniak et al., 2005
). The G5 mTerc/ Wrn/ compound knockout mouse thus offers a unique system to discover novel genes involved in ALT activation during tumor formation.
| Conclusions and perspectives |
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The increased incidence of mesenchymal cancers such as soft tissue sarcomas and osteosarcomas observed in WS patients may relate to the nature of the telomere maintenance program activated in these tumors. In contrast to carcinomas, mesenchymal tumors preferentially activate ALT to maintain telomeres. Activation of ALT occurs in sarcomas derived from mTerc/ Wrn/ cells that have dysfunctional telomeres and is probably because of increased HR at telomeres (T-SCE). We postulate that WRN is normally required to repress inappropriate telomeric recombination intermediates through its ability to resolve telomeric D-loops (Opresko et al., 2004
). T-SCE, when unequal and coupled with non-random chromosomal segregation, may confer a proliferative advantage to cells that stochastically acquire longer telomeres, enabling escape from cellular senescence (Bailey et al., 2004
; Muntoni and Reddel, 2005
). The finding that human ALT cell lines also display elevated T-SCE (Bechter et al., 2004
; Londono-Vallejo et al., 2004
) suggests that acquisition of HR-mediated telomere recombination mechanisms is an important prerequisite for transition to the ALT phenotype. Although the mechanism underlying T-SCE in human ALT cells has not been identified, the data indicate that suppression of WRN function may be important for the initiation of aberrant recombination at telomeres. T-SCEs may be triggered when a replication fork encounters a block in one of the parental template strands, which leads to stalling of the DNA polymerase and pairing of the 3'-ended strand with its complement on the other, nascent sister chromatid DNA. This replication block may involve in vivo formation of G-quadruplexes. WRN can efficiently unwind G-quadruplexes in a helicase-dependent manner (Mohaghegh et al., 2001
). We postulate that WRN normally resolves G-quadruplexes during DNA replication, which allows replication fork progression and complete synthesis of telomeric DNA. Lack of WRN helicase activity leads to replication fork stalling, resulting in preferential loss of the lagging-strand telomeric DNA (Crabbe et al., 2004
) and elevated exchanges among sister telomeres. In addition, the recent observations that cells lacking POT1 (Wu et al., 2006
) and Ku70 (Celli et al., 2006
) also experience increased T-SCE suggest that a crucial function of the telosome/shelterin complex is to protect telomeres from aberrant HR. Since WRN interacts with both of these proteins, it is likely that WRN is also required for the telosome/shelterin complex to exert proper capping function and prevent the formation of dysfunctional telomeres.
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