A physical and functional constituent of telomerase anchor site. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Telomerase is a ribonucleoprotein reverse transcriptase responsible for the maintenance of one strand of the telomere terminal repeats. It consists minimally of a catalytic protein component (TERT) and an RNA subunit that provides the template. Compared with prototypical reverse transcriptases, telomerase is unique in possessing a DNA binding domain (anchor site) that is distinct from the catalytic site. Yeast TERT mutants bearing deletion or point mutations in an N-terminal domain (known as N-GQ) were found to be selectively impaired in extending primers that form short hybrids with telomerase RNA. The mutants also suffered a significant loss of repeat addition processivity but displayed an enhancement in nucleotide addition processivity. Furthermore, the mutants manifested altered primer utilization properties for oligonucleotides containing non-telomeric residues in the 5'-region. Cross-linking studies indicate that the N-GQ domain physically contacts the 5'-region of the DNA substrate in the context of a telomerase-telomere complex. Together, these results implicate the N-GQ domain of TERT as a physical and functional constituent of the telomerase anchor site. Coupled with previous genetic analysis, our data confirm that anchor site interaction is indeed important for telomerase function in vivo.

publication date

  • May 18, 2005

Research

keywords

  • Saccharomyces cerevisiae
  • Telomerase

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC1237055

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 22544441637

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1074/jbc.M503028200

PubMed ID

  • 15905172

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 280

issue

  • 28