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Manifestation of Novel Social Challenges of the European Union in the Teaching Material of Medical Biotechnology Master’s Programmes at the University of Pécs and at the University of Debrecen Identification number: TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Manifestation of Novel Social Challenges of the European Union in the Teaching Material of Medical Biotechnology Master’s Programmes at the University of Pécs and at the University of Debrecen Identification number: TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Krisztián Kvell Molecular and Clinical Basics of Gerontology – Lecture 22 AGING AND GENE EXPRESSION – ALTERATIONS OF THE GENOME DUE TO AGING Telomere sequence and telomerase function TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Telomerase RNA template A A U C C C A DNA T T A Nucleotides TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Telomeres as biological clocks • Most favored clock, but cause or marker? • Sequence: TTAGGG hexanucleotide > 1000x • Polymerase leaves gap with every replication • Oxidative stress accelerates telomere loss rate Factors influencing telomere loss rate TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 • Telomeres form terminal loops for stability • Role of TRF2 in telomere stability • Issue of telomere length threshold • Issue of telomere loss rate vs. stress rate TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Changes in telomere length Embyonic stem cells Adult stem cells Extending the length of a telomere Chromosome Telomere long Telomere short Active telomerase Telomerase inactive or absent Short end of New DNA DNA G G T T A G G G T T A G C C T C C C A A A U T C A A U RNA template T T A G G G A A T C C C Telomere is repetitive DNA sequence DNA polymerase Telomerase TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Slowing, reversing telomere shortening • Counteracting (oxidative) stress conditions • Telomerase activity increases telomere length • ALT: alternative telomere lengthening TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Significance of telomere in cancer Telomerase reactivation Telomere lenght Telomere crisis Normal tissue Hyperplasia Carcinoma in situ Invasive cancer Number of aberrations Genome instability Loss of telomere function Further evolution TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Further clocks ticking • Soluble factors / cell nonautonomous spreading • Pineal clock, role of melatonin • Circadian clock mechanisms • DNA methylation, acetylation, deacetylation TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Genomic instability in progeria types • Werner-syndrome • Cockayne syndrome • Hutchinson-Guilford progeria • Xeroderma pigmentosum TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Werner syndrome • Homozygous recessive (skin, cataract, diabetes mellitus osteoporosis) • WRN protein (anti-recombinase, helicase, removes recombination and repair intermediates) • Defective transcription (50%) • Relation with p53 (attenuated apoptosis) TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Cockayne syndrome • Rare segmental progeria (dwarfism, photosensitivity, neurological degeneration etc.) • Defect in transcription coupled repair (TCR) • Defective 8-oxodG excision (50%) • Subtypes: CS-A, CS-B TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Hutchinson-Guilford progeria syndrome • Lamin A mutation (nuclear envelope fragility) • Primerily affects mesenchymal tissues • HGPS cells have decreased stress resistence • Rapid progeria, premature death TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 DNA damage: causes, results I Reactive oxygen species (ROS) DNA REPAIR Replication errors X rays UV light (limited synthesis: small fragments) Cell cycle arrest (Apoptosis) Alkylating agents Spontaneous reactions Mutations Cancer and genetic diseases TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Oxidative DNA damage • > 10,000 DNA lesions / cell / day • A variety of DNA damage types (> 50 types) • 5 distinctive groups - Oxidized purines - Oxidized pyrimidines - Abasic sites - Single-strand breaks - Double-strand breaks TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 DNA damage: causes, results II Metabolism Exogenus DNA damage Stochastic Dampened GH/IGF axis Cellular responses (apoptosis, senescence) Mutations, epi-mutations Tissue atrophy, lost regeneration Altered regulatory circuits Regulated Improved survival Tissue/organ functional decline, degenerative or hyperplastic disease TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Oxidative DNA damage repair types I • Base excision repair (BER) is most important, subtypes: AP endonuclease or lyase repair • Removal of oxidized purines (two types of lesions: 8-oxodG and formamido-pyrimidines) • Removal of oxidized pyrimidines (strong block, strongly cytotoxic) TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Oxidative DNA damage repair types II • Repair of strand breaks (singlestrand breaks occur 10x more frequently than doubles) • Limited mitochondrial DNA repair (nuclear encoded proteins of OGG1, POLG) • Nucleotide excision repair (NER) that is transcription-coupled repair of active genes TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Genes related to oxidative DNA damage repair • Defect is lethal: APE1, FEN1, POLB, LIG1, LIG3, XRCC1 • Defect is viable: OGG1, NTHL1, MYH, ADPRT • Severity not tested: NEIL1, 2, 3, TDG, SMUG1, APE2 TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Oxidative DNA damage repair and aging • Elevated cancer frequencies • Werner syndrome (antirecombinase) • Cockayne syndrome (TCR) • XPD and XPA (repair deficiency) • Base excision repair (BER) defect is lethal TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Non-oxidative DNA damage • Depurination and depyrimidination • Deamination • Single-strand breaks • Spontaneous methylation • Glycation • Cross-linking TÁMOP-4.1.2-08/1/A-2009-0011 Non-oxidative protein damage • Biosynthetic errors • Transcriptional errors • Translational errors • Racemization and isomerization • Deamidation (asparagine and glutamine) • Reactive carbonyl groups (nonoxidative)