Analyze the Data 8-1: Telomerase in Cancer Cells In culture, normal human cells
ID: 214897 • Letter: A
Question
Analyze the Data 8-1: Telomerase in Cancer Cells
In culture, normal human cells undergo a finite number of cell divisions until they no longer proliferate; they then enter a state known as replicative senescence. The inability to maintain normal telomere length is thought to play an important role in this process. Telomerase is a ribonucleoprotein complex that regenerates the ends of telomeres lost during each round of DNA replication. Human telomerase consists of a template containing an RNA subunit and a catalytic protein subunit known as human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT). Most normal cells do not express telomerase; most cancer cells do express telomerase. Thus telomerase is proposed to play a key role in the transformation of cells from a normal to a malignant state.
a. In the following experiments, the role of telomerase in the growth of human cancer cells was investigated (see W. C. Hahn et al., 1999, Nature Medicine 5:1164–1170). Immortal, telomerase-positive cells (cells A) and immortal, telomerase-negative cells (cells B) were transfected with a plasmid expressing either a wild-type or a mutated hTERT. Telomerase activity in cell extracts was measured by the telomeric repeat amplification protocol (TRAP) assay, a PCR-based assay that measures the addition of telomere repeat units onto a DNA fragment. A six-base-pair ladder pattern is typically seen. Control indicates transfection of cells with just the “empty” plasmid expression vector that does not express any protein. Wild type and mutant indicate transfection with a plasmid vector expressing a wild-type hTERT or the mutated hTERT, respectively. What do you conclude about the effect of the mutant hTERT on telomerase activity in the transfected cells? What type of mutation would this represent?
b. Telomere length in these transfected cells was examined by Southern blot analysis of total genomic DNA digested with a restriction enzyme and probed with a telomere-specific DNA sequence. What do you conclude about the lengths of the telomeres in cells A and B after transfection with the wild-type or mutant hTERT? By what mechanism do cells A and B maintain their telomere lengths?
**************ANSWER QUESTION B ONLY******************
Cell A Control Wild type Mutant Cell B Control Wild type MutantExplanation / Answer
Cell type A - the mutant hTERT is causing a reduction in telomere length.
Cell type B - the mutant hTERT results in a telomere of normal length - comparable to control.
This indicates that cellA got transformed due to reduction in telomeres while for cell B the reason is something apart from telomeres. It is able to maintain its telomeres using the endogenous hTERT.