Protecting telomere from the DNA damage response is essential to avoid the entry into cellular senescence and organismal aging. The progressive telomere DNA shortening in dividing somatic cells, programmed during development, leads to critically short telomeres that trigger replicative senescence and thereby contribute to aging. In several...
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July 2021 (v1)Journal articleUploaded on: December 3, 2022
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July 2016 (v1)Journal article
Telomere stability is a hallmark of immortalized cells, including cancer cells. While the telomere length is maintained in most cases by the telomerase, the activity of a protein complex called Shelterin is required to protect telomeres against unsuitable activation of the DNA damage response pathway. Within this complex, telomeric repeat...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
August 15, 2024 (v1)Journal article
Linear unconstrained DNA cannot harbor supercoils since these supercoils can diffuse and be eliminated by free rotation of the DNA strands at the end of the molecule. Mammalian telomeres, despite constituting the ends of linear chromosomes, can hold supercoils and be subjected to topological stress. While negative supercoiling was previously...
Uploaded on: November 7, 2024 -
March 2013 (v1)Journal article
International audience
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
March 2013 (v1)Journal article
International audience
Uploaded on: February 22, 2023 -
February 29, 2016 (v1)Journal article
Telomere integrity is essential to maintain genome stability, and telomeric dysfunctions are associated with cancer and aging pathologies. In human, the shelterin complex binds TTAGGG DNA repeats and provides capping to chromosome ends. Within shel-terin, RAP1 is recruited through its interaction with TRF2, and TRF2 is required for telomere...
Uploaded on: February 28, 2023 -
May 2018 (v1)Journal article
International audience
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
January 21, 2016 (v1)Journal article
The shelterin proteins protect telomeres against activation of the DNA damage checkpoints and recombinational repair. We show here that a dimer of the shelterin subunit TRF2 wraps ∼ 90 bp of DNA through several lysine and arginine residues localized around its homodimerization domain. The expression of a wrapping-deficient TRF2 mutant, named...
Uploaded on: February 28, 2023 -
July 2010 (v1)Journal article
Human telomeres are protected from DNA damage by a nucleoprotein complex that includes the repeat-binding factor TRF2. Here, we report that TRF2 regulates the 5′ exonuclease activity of its binding partner, Apollo, a member of the metallo-β-lactamase family that is required for telomere integrity during S phase. TRF2 and Apollo also suppress...
Uploaded on: December 3, 2022