Accumulation of single-strand breaks is the major cause of telomere shortening in human fibroblasts

T von Zglinicki, R Pilger, N Sitte - Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 2000 - Elsevier
T von Zglinicki, R Pilger, N Sitte
Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 2000Elsevier
Telomere shortening triggers replicative senescence in human fibroblasts. The inability of
DNA polymerases to replicate a linear DNA molecule completely (the end replication
problem) is one cause of telomere shortening. Other possible causes are the formation of
single-stranded overhangs at the end of telomeres and the preferential vulnerability of
telomeres to oxidative stress. To elucidate the relative importance of these possibilities,
amount and distribution of telomeric single-strand breaks, length of the G-rich overhang, and …
Telomere shortening triggers replicative senescence in human fibroblasts. The inability of DNA polymerases to replicate a linear DNA molecule completely (the end replication problem) is one cause of telomere shortening. Other possible causes are the formation of single-stranded overhangs at the end of telomeres and the preferential vulnerability of telomeres to oxidative stress. To elucidate the relative importance of these possibilities, amount and distribution of telomeric single-strand breaks, length of the G-rich overhang, and telomere shortening rate in human MRC-5 fibroblasts were measured. Treatment of nonproliferating cells with hydrogen peroxide increases the sensitivity to S1 nuclease in telomeres preferentially and accelerates their shortening by a corresponding amount as soon as the cells proliferate. A reduction of the activity of intracellular peroxides using the spin trap α-phenyl-t-butyl-nitrone reduces the telomere shortening rate and increases the replicative life span. The length of the telomeric single-stranded overhang is independent of DNA damaging stresses, but single-strand breaks accumulate randomly all along the telomere after alkylation. The telomere shortening rate and the rate of replicative aging can be either accelerated or decelerated by a modification of the amount of oxidative stress. Quantitatively, stress-mediated telomere damage contributes most to telomere shortening under standard conditions.
Elsevier