4.7 Article

The human telomerase catalytic subunit and viral telomerase RNA reconstitute a functional telomerase complex in a cell-free system, but not in human cells

Journal

CELLULAR & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 4, Pages 598-615

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.2478/s11658-012-0031-6

Keywords

Telomerase; Holoenzyme; hTERT; vTR; Dyskerin; Marek's disease

Funding

  1. Ligue Nationale Contre le Cancer
  2. Region Centre (France)
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [IC1-14026, MOP-86672]
  4. McGill University Graduate Student Fellowship
  5. CIHR Cancer Consortium Training Grant Award from the McGill Cancer Centre
  6. McGill University Faculty of Medicine Internal Studentship

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The minimal vertebrate telomerase enzyme is composed of a protein component (telomerase reverse transcriptase, TERT) and an RNA component (telomerase RNA, TR). Expression of these two subunits is sufficient to reconstitute telomerase activity in vitro, while the formation of a holoenzyme comprising telomerase-associated proteins is necessary for proper telomere length maintenance. Previous reports demonstrated the high processivity of the human telomerase complex and the interspecies compatibility of human TERT (hTERT). In this study, we tested the function of the only known viral telomerase RNA subunit (vTR) in association with human telomerase, both in a cell-free system and in human cells. When vTR is assembled with hTERT in a cell-free environment, it is able to interact with hTERT and to reconstitute telomerase activity. However, in human cells, vTR does not reconstitute telomerase activity and could not be detected in the human telomerase complex, suggesting that vTR is not able to interact properly with the proteins constituting the human telomerase holoenzyme.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available