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https://doi.org/10.1038/emboj.2012.132
Title: | Oncogene-induced telomere dysfunction enforces cellular senescence in human cancer precursor lesions | Authors: | Suram, A Kaplunov, J Patel, P.L Ruan, H Cerutti, A Boccardi, V Fumagalli, M Di Micco, R Mirani, N Gurung, R.L Hande, M.P D'Adda Di Fagagna, F Herbig, U |
Keywords: | beta galactosidase Ki 67 antigen protein p16 telomerase animal cell article cancer growth cell aging cell proliferation chromosome structure controlled study DNA replication enzyme activity gene replication human human cell human tissue nonhuman oncogene priority journal telomere telomere dysfunction induced senescence Cell Aging Cell Line Cell Transformation, Neoplastic DNA Replication Humans Oncogenes Protein Synthesis Inhibitors Puromycin Signal Transduction Telomere |
Issue Date: | 2012 | Citation: | Suram, A, Kaplunov, J, Patel, P.L, Ruan, H, Cerutti, A, Boccardi, V, Fumagalli, M, Di Micco, R, Mirani, N, Gurung, R.L, Hande, M.P, D'Adda Di Fagagna, F, Herbig, U (2012). Oncogene-induced telomere dysfunction enforces cellular senescence in human cancer precursor lesions. EMBO Journal 31 (13) : 2839-2851. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1038/emboj.2012.132 | Abstract: | In normal human somatic cells, telomere dysfunction causes cellular senescence, a stable proliferative arrest with tumour suppressing properties. Whether telomere dysfunction-induced senescence (TDIS) suppresses cancer growth in humans, however, is unknown. Here, we demonstrate that multiple and distinct human cancer precursor lesions, but not corresponding malignant cancers, are comprised of cells that display hallmarks of TDIS. Furthermore, we demonstrate that oncogenic signalling, frequently associated with initiating cancer growth in humans, dramatically affected telomere structure and function by causing telomeric replication stress, rapid and stochastic telomere attrition, and consequently telomere dysfunction in cells that lack hTERT activity. DNA replication stress induced by drugs also resulted in telomere dysfunction and cellular senescence in normal human cells, demonstrating that telomeric repeats indeed are hypersensitive to DNA replication stress. Our data reveal that TDIS, accelerated by oncogene-induced DNA replication stress, is a biological response of cells in human cancer precursor lesions and provide strong evidence that TDIS is a critical tumour suppressing mechanism in humans. ©2012 European Molecular Biology Organization. | Source Title: | EMBO Journal | URI: | https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/175333 | ISSN: | 0261-4189 | DOI: | 10.1038/emboj.2012.132 |
Appears in Collections: | Staff Publications Elements |
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