Telomeres ensure the complete replication of genetic material while simultaneously distinguishing the chromosome terminus from a double-strand break. A prevailing theme in telomere biology is that the two chromosome ends are symmetrical. Both terminate in a single-strand 3′ extension, and the 3′ extension is crucial for telomere end protection. In this issue of Genes & Development, Kazda and colleagues (pp. 1703-1713) challenge this paradigm using a series of elegant biochemical and genetic assays to demonstrate that half of the chromosomes in flowering plants are blunt-ended. This discovery reveals unanticipated complexity in telomeric DNA processing and a novel mode of chromosome end protection. © 2012 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.
CITATION STYLE
Nelson, A. D. L., & Shippen, D. E. (2012). Blunt-ended telomeres: An alternative ending to the replication and end protection stories. Genes and Development, 26(15), 1648–1652. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.199059.112
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