AI Article Synopsis

  • Telomeres in linear chromosomes have protective caps, and when they malfunction, it can lead to dangerous chromosome fusions and genomic instability, possibly resulting in cell death or cancer.
  • In a study using the plant Arabidopsis, researchers tested the hypothesis that without certain recombination pathways, exposed chromosome ends would be damaged by nucleases, causing gene loss and cell death.
  • Findings showed that by eliminating the recombination pathways responsible for fusions, normal growth and development were restored in mutant plants, highlighting that fusions were the main cause of developmental issues and demonstrating a competition between telomerase and recombination proteins at the telomeres.

Article Abstract

The telomeres of linear eukaryotic chromosomes are protected by caps consisting of evolutionarily conserved nucleoprotein complexes. Telomere dysfunction leads to recombination of chromosome ends and this can result in fusions which initiate chromosomal breakage-fusion-bridge cycles, causing genomic instability and potentially cell death or cancer. We hypothesize that in the absence of the recombination pathways implicated in these fusions, deprotected chromosome ends will instead be eroded by nucleases, also leading to the loss of genes and cell death. In this work, we set out to specifically test this hypothesis in the plant, Arabidopsis. Telomere protection in Arabidopsis implicates KU and CST and their absence leads to chromosome fusions, severe genomic instability and dramatic developmental defects. We have analysed the involvement of end-joining recombination pathways in telomere fusions and the consequences of this on genomic instability and growth. Strikingly, the absence of the multiple end-joining pathways eliminates chromosome fusion and restores normal growth and development to cst ku80 mutant plants. It is thus the chromosomal fusions, per se, which are the underlying cause of the severe developmental defects. This rescue is mediated by telomerase-dependent telomere extension, revealing a competition between telomerase and end-joining recombination proteins for access to deprotected telomeres.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4231758PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gku897DOI Listing

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