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Telomerase reactivation reverses tissue degeneration in aged telomerase deficient mice

An ageing world population has fueled interest in regenerative remedies that may stem declining organ function and maintain fitness. Unanswered is whether elimination of intrinsic instigators driving age-associated degeneration can reverse, as opposed to simply arrest, various afflictions of the age...

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Autores principales: Jaskelioff, Mariela, Muller, Florian L., Paik, Ji-Hye, Thomas, Emily, Jiang, Shan, Adams, Andrew, Sahin, Ergun, Kost-Alimova, Maria, Protopopov, Alexei, Cadiñanos, Juan, Horner, James W., Maratos-Flier, Eleftheria, DePinho, Ronald A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3057569/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21113150
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09603
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author Jaskelioff, Mariela
Muller, Florian L.
Paik, Ji-Hye
Thomas, Emily
Jiang, Shan
Adams, Andrew
Sahin, Ergun
Kost-Alimova, Maria
Protopopov, Alexei
Cadiñanos, Juan
Horner, James W.
Maratos-Flier, Eleftheria
DePinho, Ronald A.
author_facet Jaskelioff, Mariela
Muller, Florian L.
Paik, Ji-Hye
Thomas, Emily
Jiang, Shan
Adams, Andrew
Sahin, Ergun
Kost-Alimova, Maria
Protopopov, Alexei
Cadiñanos, Juan
Horner, James W.
Maratos-Flier, Eleftheria
DePinho, Ronald A.
author_sort Jaskelioff, Mariela
collection PubMed
description An ageing world population has fueled interest in regenerative remedies that may stem declining organ function and maintain fitness. Unanswered is whether elimination of intrinsic instigators driving age-associated degeneration can reverse, as opposed to simply arrest, various afflictions of the aged. Such instigators include progressively damaged genomes. Telomerase deficient mice have served as a model system to study the adverse cellular and organismal consequences of wide-spread endogenous DNA damage signaling activation in vivo1. Telomere loss and uncapping provokes progressive tissue atrophy, stem cell depletion, organ system failure, and impaired tissue injury responses1. Here, we sought to determine whether entrenched multi-system degeneration in adult mice with severe telomere dysfunction can be halted or possibly reversed by reactivation of endogenous telomerase activity. To this end, we engineered a knock-in allele encoding a 4-hydroxytamoxifen (4-OHT)-inducible telomerase reverse transcriptase-Estrogen Receptor (TERT-ER) under transcriptional control of the endogenous TERT promoter. Homozygous TERT-ER mice display short dysfunctional telomeres and sustain increased DNA damage signaling and classical degenerative phenotypes upon successive generational matings and advancing age. Telomerase reactivation in such late generation TERT-ER mice extends telomeres, reduces DNA damage signaling and associated cellular checkpoint responses, allows resumption of proliferation in quiescent cultures, and eliminates degenerative phenotypes across multiple organs including testes, spleens and intestines. Notably, somatic telomerase reactivation reversed neurodegeneration with restoration of proliferating Sox2+ neural progenitors, DCX+ newborn neurons, and Olig2+ oligodendrocyte populations. Consistent with the integral role of SVZ neural progenitors in generation and maintenance of olfactory bulb interneurons2, this wave of telomerase-dependent neurogenesis resulted in alleviation of hyposmia and recovery of innate olfactory avoidance responses. Accumulating evidence implicating telomere damage as a driver of age-associated organ decline and disease risk1,3 and the dramatic reversal of systemic degenerative phenotypes in adult mice observed here support the development of regenerative strategies designed to restore telomere integrity.
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spelling pubmed-30575692011-07-06 Telomerase reactivation reverses tissue degeneration in aged telomerase deficient mice Jaskelioff, Mariela Muller, Florian L. Paik, Ji-Hye Thomas, Emily Jiang, Shan Adams, Andrew Sahin, Ergun Kost-Alimova, Maria Protopopov, Alexei Cadiñanos, Juan Horner, James W. Maratos-Flier, Eleftheria DePinho, Ronald A. Nature Article An ageing world population has fueled interest in regenerative remedies that may stem declining organ function and maintain fitness. Unanswered is whether elimination of intrinsic instigators driving age-associated degeneration can reverse, as opposed to simply arrest, various afflictions of the aged. Such instigators include progressively damaged genomes. Telomerase deficient mice have served as a model system to study the adverse cellular and organismal consequences of wide-spread endogenous DNA damage signaling activation in vivo1. Telomere loss and uncapping provokes progressive tissue atrophy, stem cell depletion, organ system failure, and impaired tissue injury responses1. Here, we sought to determine whether entrenched multi-system degeneration in adult mice with severe telomere dysfunction can be halted or possibly reversed by reactivation of endogenous telomerase activity. To this end, we engineered a knock-in allele encoding a 4-hydroxytamoxifen (4-OHT)-inducible telomerase reverse transcriptase-Estrogen Receptor (TERT-ER) under transcriptional control of the endogenous TERT promoter. Homozygous TERT-ER mice display short dysfunctional telomeres and sustain increased DNA damage signaling and classical degenerative phenotypes upon successive generational matings and advancing age. Telomerase reactivation in such late generation TERT-ER mice extends telomeres, reduces DNA damage signaling and associated cellular checkpoint responses, allows resumption of proliferation in quiescent cultures, and eliminates degenerative phenotypes across multiple organs including testes, spleens and intestines. Notably, somatic telomerase reactivation reversed neurodegeneration with restoration of proliferating Sox2+ neural progenitors, DCX+ newborn neurons, and Olig2+ oligodendrocyte populations. Consistent with the integral role of SVZ neural progenitors in generation and maintenance of olfactory bulb interneurons2, this wave of telomerase-dependent neurogenesis resulted in alleviation of hyposmia and recovery of innate olfactory avoidance responses. Accumulating evidence implicating telomere damage as a driver of age-associated organ decline and disease risk1,3 and the dramatic reversal of systemic degenerative phenotypes in adult mice observed here support the development of regenerative strategies designed to restore telomere integrity. 2010-11-28 2011-01-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3057569/ /pubmed/21113150 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09603 Text en Users may view, print, copy, download and text and data- mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Jaskelioff, Mariela
Muller, Florian L.
Paik, Ji-Hye
Thomas, Emily
Jiang, Shan
Adams, Andrew
Sahin, Ergun
Kost-Alimova, Maria
Protopopov, Alexei
Cadiñanos, Juan
Horner, James W.
Maratos-Flier, Eleftheria
DePinho, Ronald A.
Telomerase reactivation reverses tissue degeneration in aged telomerase deficient mice
title Telomerase reactivation reverses tissue degeneration in aged telomerase deficient mice
title_full Telomerase reactivation reverses tissue degeneration in aged telomerase deficient mice
title_fullStr Telomerase reactivation reverses tissue degeneration in aged telomerase deficient mice
title_full_unstemmed Telomerase reactivation reverses tissue degeneration in aged telomerase deficient mice
title_short Telomerase reactivation reverses tissue degeneration in aged telomerase deficient mice
title_sort telomerase reactivation reverses tissue degeneration in aged telomerase deficient mice
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3057569/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21113150
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09603
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