Posttranscriptional manipulation of TERC reverses molecular hallmarks of telomere disease

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Abstract

The telomerase RNA component (TERC) is a critical determinant of cellular self-renewal. Poly(A)-specific ribonuclease (PARN) is required for posttranscriptional maturation of TERC. PARN mutations lead to incomplete 3 end processing and increased destruction of nascent TERC RNA transcripts, resulting in telomerase deficiency and telomere diseases. Here, we determined that overexpression of TERC increased telomere length in PARN-deficient cells and hypothesized that decreasing posttranscriptional 3 oligo-adenylation of TERC would counteract the deleterious effects of PARN mutations. Inhibition of the noncanonical poly(A) polymerase PAP-associated domain-containing 5 (PAPD5) increased TERC levels in PARN-mutant patient cells. PAPD5 inhibition was also associated with increases in TERC stability, telomerase activity, and telomere elongation. Our results demonstrate that manipulating posttranscriptional regulatory pathways may be a potential strategy to reverse the molecular hallmarks of telomere disease.

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APA

Boyraz, B., Moon, D. H., Segal, M., Muosieyiri, M. Z., Aykanat, A., Tai, A. K., … Agarwal, S. (2016). Posttranscriptional manipulation of TERC reverses molecular hallmarks of telomere disease. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 126(9), 3377–3382. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI87547

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