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A retrospective examination of mean relative telomere length in the Tasmanian Familial Hematological Malignancies Study

Telomere length has a biological link to cancer, with excessive telomere shortening leading to genetic instability and resultant malignant transformation. Telomere length is heritable and genetic variants determining telomere length have been identified. Telomere biology has been implicated in the d...

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Autores principales: BLACKBURN, NICHOLAS B., CHARLESWORTH, JAC C., MARTHICK, JAMES R., TEGG, ELIZABETH M., MARSDEN, KATHERINE A., SRIKANTH, VELANDAI, BLANGERO, JOHN, LOWENTHAL, RAY M., FOOTE, SIMON J., DICKINSON, JOANNE L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: D.A. Spandidos 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4254675/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25351806
http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/or.2014.3568
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author BLACKBURN, NICHOLAS B.
CHARLESWORTH, JAC C.
MARTHICK, JAMES R.
TEGG, ELIZABETH M.
MARSDEN, KATHERINE A.
SRIKANTH, VELANDAI
BLANGERO, JOHN
LOWENTHAL, RAY M.
FOOTE, SIMON J.
DICKINSON, JOANNE L.
author_facet BLACKBURN, NICHOLAS B.
CHARLESWORTH, JAC C.
MARTHICK, JAMES R.
TEGG, ELIZABETH M.
MARSDEN, KATHERINE A.
SRIKANTH, VELANDAI
BLANGERO, JOHN
LOWENTHAL, RAY M.
FOOTE, SIMON J.
DICKINSON, JOANNE L.
author_sort BLACKBURN, NICHOLAS B.
collection PubMed
description Telomere length has a biological link to cancer, with excessive telomere shortening leading to genetic instability and resultant malignant transformation. Telomere length is heritable and genetic variants determining telomere length have been identified. Telomere biology has been implicated in the development of hematological malignancies (HMs), therefore, closer examination of telomere length in HMs may provide further insight into genetic etiology of disease development and support for telomere length as a prognostic factor in HMs. We retrospectively examined mean relative telomere length in the Tasmanian Familial Hematological Malignancies Study using a quantitative PCR method on genomic DNA from peripheral blood samples. Fifty-five familial HM cases, 191 unaffected relatives of familial HM cases and 75 non-familial HM cases were compared with 758 population controls. Variance components modeling was employed to identify factors influencing variation in telomere length. Overall, HM cases had shorter mean relative telomere length (P=2.9×10(−6)) and this was observed across both familial and non-familial HM cases (P=2.2×10(−4) and 2.2×10(−5), respectively) as well as additional subgroupings of HM cases according to broad subtypes. Mean relative telomere length was also significantly heritable (62.6%; P=4.7×10(−5)) in the HM families in the present study. We present new evidence of significantly shorter mean relative telomere length in both familial and non-familial HM cases from the same population adding further support to the potential use of telomere length as a prognostic factor in HMs. Whether telomere shortening is the cause of or the result of HMs is yet to be determined, but as telomere length was found to be highly heritable in our HM families this suggests that genetics driving the variation in telomere length is related to HM disease risk.
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spelling pubmed-42546752014-12-05 A retrospective examination of mean relative telomere length in the Tasmanian Familial Hematological Malignancies Study BLACKBURN, NICHOLAS B. CHARLESWORTH, JAC C. MARTHICK, JAMES R. TEGG, ELIZABETH M. MARSDEN, KATHERINE A. SRIKANTH, VELANDAI BLANGERO, JOHN LOWENTHAL, RAY M. FOOTE, SIMON J. DICKINSON, JOANNE L. Oncol Rep Articles Telomere length has a biological link to cancer, with excessive telomere shortening leading to genetic instability and resultant malignant transformation. Telomere length is heritable and genetic variants determining telomere length have been identified. Telomere biology has been implicated in the development of hematological malignancies (HMs), therefore, closer examination of telomere length in HMs may provide further insight into genetic etiology of disease development and support for telomere length as a prognostic factor in HMs. We retrospectively examined mean relative telomere length in the Tasmanian Familial Hematological Malignancies Study using a quantitative PCR method on genomic DNA from peripheral blood samples. Fifty-five familial HM cases, 191 unaffected relatives of familial HM cases and 75 non-familial HM cases were compared with 758 population controls. Variance components modeling was employed to identify factors influencing variation in telomere length. Overall, HM cases had shorter mean relative telomere length (P=2.9×10(−6)) and this was observed across both familial and non-familial HM cases (P=2.2×10(−4) and 2.2×10(−5), respectively) as well as additional subgroupings of HM cases according to broad subtypes. Mean relative telomere length was also significantly heritable (62.6%; P=4.7×10(−5)) in the HM families in the present study. We present new evidence of significantly shorter mean relative telomere length in both familial and non-familial HM cases from the same population adding further support to the potential use of telomere length as a prognostic factor in HMs. Whether telomere shortening is the cause of or the result of HMs is yet to be determined, but as telomere length was found to be highly heritable in our HM families this suggests that genetics driving the variation in telomere length is related to HM disease risk. D.A. Spandidos 2015-01 2014-10-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4254675/ /pubmed/25351806 http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/or.2014.3568 Text en Copyright © 2015, Spandidos Publications http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This is an open-access article licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. The article may be redistributed, reproduced, and reused for non-commercial purposes, provided the original source is properly cited.
spellingShingle Articles
BLACKBURN, NICHOLAS B.
CHARLESWORTH, JAC C.
MARTHICK, JAMES R.
TEGG, ELIZABETH M.
MARSDEN, KATHERINE A.
SRIKANTH, VELANDAI
BLANGERO, JOHN
LOWENTHAL, RAY M.
FOOTE, SIMON J.
DICKINSON, JOANNE L.
A retrospective examination of mean relative telomere length in the Tasmanian Familial Hematological Malignancies Study
title A retrospective examination of mean relative telomere length in the Tasmanian Familial Hematological Malignancies Study
title_full A retrospective examination of mean relative telomere length in the Tasmanian Familial Hematological Malignancies Study
title_fullStr A retrospective examination of mean relative telomere length in the Tasmanian Familial Hematological Malignancies Study
title_full_unstemmed A retrospective examination of mean relative telomere length in the Tasmanian Familial Hematological Malignancies Study
title_short A retrospective examination of mean relative telomere length in the Tasmanian Familial Hematological Malignancies Study
title_sort retrospective examination of mean relative telomere length in the tasmanian familial hematological malignancies study
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4254675/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25351806
http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/or.2014.3568
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