In 2009
Elizabeth Blackburn together with Carol Greider and Jack Szostak were awarded
Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for the discovery of telomeres and the
enzyme called telomerase. This is probably the most important recent discovery
made in biology because it makes our conception of replication much clear
and it completely changed peoples view on aging and mortality. This discovery
can now be found in all cell biology textbooks, and I am also studying this
currently.
Telomeres are the kind of “caps” at the ends of chromosomes which
protect chromosomes in the cells from fusing with each other and from
rearranging. If those abnormalities occur then cancer can be developed.
Like all the chromosomes with its genes, telomeres are the sequences of
DNA. A chemical code made of four nucleic acids G (guanine), A (adenine),
T (thymine), C (cytosine). Blackburn studied Tetrahymena (a freshwater pond), and identified a sequence of DNA
that was repeated a few times at the end tips of the chromosomes. The purpose
of this identified sequence (CCCCAA) was unclear at the beginning.
Bright fluorescent staining makes telomeric regions visible (light blue
tips) on these blue-stained human chromosomes.
Then she found that it is essential for DNA replication (copying of it).
During replication an enzyme called DNA polymerase which duplicates DNA cannot
complete duplication all the way to the end of chromosome. Therefore, it was
considered that telomeres become shorted and shorted after each replication and
when telomere consumed the cell dies. You can think about it like the plastic end tip of the shoelace,
when it is broken the shoelace tip becomes sticky and hard to tie.
Then, she noticed that something was adding a new DNA at the ends of the
chromosomes. The telomeres were not shortening, and so the cells were able to
replicate enormously. They were in a fact “immortal”. This something was found
to be telomerase, an enzyme also called telomere terminal transferase. This
enzyme adds more repeat sequences to the end of the DNA in germline cells (egg
and sperm), thus making them “immortal”. However, somatic cells are “mortal”
because of much lower levels of this enzyme activity. When telomeres in somatic
cell shorten to critical level, this cell no longer divides. This phenomenon
contributes to some of the changes we see in aging.
Here is the video where Elizabeth Blackburn explaining how she made this discovery.
Now, why actually telomeres shorten? This process is called “end
replication problem” that occur in eukaryotes (with nucleus) during
replication. It is like someone painting flour in a closed room and while he
reaches the corner, he cannot paint the corner as he is standing there.
Take a look at this picture.
When DNA is unzipped and replicates it makes two new strands: leading (5’
to 3’) and lagging (3’ to 5’) strands. The 5' and 3' indicate the carbon
numbers in the DNA's sugar backbone made of deoxyribose linked with phosphate
groups via phosphodiester bond. The 5' carbon is attached to phosphate group and
3' carbon is attached to hydroxyl group. Because of this DNA has
directionality, like DNA polymerase catalyzes addition of nucleotides to 3’ or
it only works in 5’ to 3’ end direction.
Leading strand is called so because it is synthesized continuously
toward the direction of replication. Lagging strand is called so because it is
synthesized discontinuously in short segments called Okazaki fragments. Each
Okazaki fragment is synthesized backward the direction of replication, because DNA
polymerase can only elongate strand from a free 3' hydroxyl group. This is
called backstitching mechanism. There are RNA primers which provide 3'-OH
groups at regular intervals along the lagging strand. While leading strand can
synthesize new DNA all the way to the end, lagging strand stays short at the
end. Even if last one RNA primer was built at the very end of the DNA, it
cannot be removed by DNA because there is no 3'-OH group to start synthesizing it.
So, DNA’s shorten. This can be clearly seen from this diagram.
This “end replication problem” is solved by our enzyme telomerase. Telomerase
recognizes the telomere tip of repeat sequence. Telomerase have RNA template
inside and using it, telomerase elongates the parental strand by adding
additional nucleotides. Therefore, the lagging strand is copied completely. Information
at the ends of chromosomes is fully conveyed to the new DNA.
Working principle of telomerase can be seen from this picture and video:
Working principle of telomerase can be seen from this picture and video:
Biology is developing so fast today and it is wonderful how such tiny
things make such huge breakthroughs in understanding our life.
Reference list:
"Are Telomeres The Key To Aging And Cancer?." Are Telomeres The Key To Aging And Cancer?. http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/chromosomes/telomeres/ (accessed October 27, 2014).
Corey, David. "Abstract." National Center for Biotechnology Information. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2810624/ (accessed October 28, 2014).
Wikimedia Foundation. "Telomerase." Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telomerase (accessed October 28, 2014).
Wikimedia Foundation. "Telomere." Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telomere#Shortening (accessed October 28, 2014).
Wikimedia Foundation. "Okazaki fragments." Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okazaki_fragments (accessed October 28, 2014).




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