Telomere dysfunction alters the chemotherapeutic profile of transformed cells |
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Authors: | Lee K H Rudolph K L Ju Y J Greenberg R A Cannizzaro L Chin L Weiler S R DePinho R A |
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Affiliation: | Department of Adult Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Departments of Medicine and Genetics, and Dermatology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA. |
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Abstract: | Telomerase inhibition has been touted as a novel cancer-selective therapeutic goal based on the observation of high telomerase levels in most cancers and the importance of telomere maintenance in long-term cellular growth and survival. Here, the impact of telomere dysfunction on chemotherapeutic responses was assessed in normal and neoplastic cells derived from telomerase RNA null (mTERC(-/-)) mice. Telomere dysfunction, rather than telomerase per se, was found to be the principal determinant governing chemosensitivity specifically to agents that induced double-stranded DNA breaks (DSB). Enhanced chemosensitivity in telomere dysfunctional cells was linked to therapy-induced fragmentation and multichromosomal fusions, whereas telomerase reconstitution restored genomic integrity and chemoresistance. Loss of p53 function muted the cytotoxic effects of DSB-inducing agents in cells with telomere dysfunction. Together, these results point to the combined use of DSB-inducing agents and telomere maintenance inhibition as an effective anticancer therapeutic approach particularly in cells with intact p53-dependent checkpoint responses. |
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