Molecular characterisation of instability in human telomere repeat arrays

Telomere instability was investigated at the proximal ends of human telomeres in normal and abnormal cells, with the aim to identify the frequency and types of mutations underlying telomere repeat turnover. Analysis of the interspersion patterns of telomere and variant repeat types at the proximal e...

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Main Author: Pickett, Hilda A.
Published: University of Leicester 2002
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.697126
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6971262018-05-12T03:27:50ZMolecular characterisation of instability in human telomere repeat arraysPickett, Hilda A.2002Telomere instability was investigated at the proximal ends of human telomeres in normal and abnormal cells, with the aim to identify the frequency and types of mutations underlying telomere repeat turnover. Analysis of the interspersion patterns of telomere and variant repeat types at the proximal ends of the 12q and Xp/Yp telomeres in human pedigrees gave a germline mutation frequency of 0.6% per telomere per gamete over the proximal 1kb of the telomere repeat array. No somatic telomere mutations were identified in normal fibroblast cells, but the upper limit for the mutation frequency was estimated as 7.468xlO-3 per cell. Each of 7 germline mutation events involved increases or decreases in small numbers of repeats. These events can be explained by intra-allelic mutational mechanisms, such as replication slippage and unequal sister-chromatid exchange. Localised telomere instability was associated with the CTAGGG variant repeat type in 6/7 germline mutations. Approximately 15% of sporadic colon cancers and the majority of tumours from patients with hereditary non polyposis colon cancer (HNPCC) are caused by defects in genes involved in the mismatch repair pathway. Such defects result in an accummulation of mutations, particularly at microsatellite loci. A high mutation frequency was observed in the 12q and Xp/Yp telomere repeat arrays in colon cancers and was particularly associated with tumours showing microsatellite instability. The observed tumour mutations also involved increases or decreases in blocks of like-repeat types and can be explained by intra-allelic mutations. In one tumour, a complex telomere mutation was provisionally identified and may represent an inter-allelic mutation event. No telomeric mutations were observed in the first kilobase of the 12q and Xp/Yp telomeres in cell-lines derived from patients suffering from the premature ageing disorder Werner syndrome. The lack of telomere mutations in Werner syndrome cells is discussed, with respect to overall telomere stability.572.8University of Leicesterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.697126http://hdl.handle.net/2381/30343Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 572.8
spellingShingle 572.8
Pickett, Hilda A.
Molecular characterisation of instability in human telomere repeat arrays
description Telomere instability was investigated at the proximal ends of human telomeres in normal and abnormal cells, with the aim to identify the frequency and types of mutations underlying telomere repeat turnover. Analysis of the interspersion patterns of telomere and variant repeat types at the proximal ends of the 12q and Xp/Yp telomeres in human pedigrees gave a germline mutation frequency of 0.6% per telomere per gamete over the proximal 1kb of the telomere repeat array. No somatic telomere mutations were identified in normal fibroblast cells, but the upper limit for the mutation frequency was estimated as 7.468xlO-3 per cell. Each of 7 germline mutation events involved increases or decreases in small numbers of repeats. These events can be explained by intra-allelic mutational mechanisms, such as replication slippage and unequal sister-chromatid exchange. Localised telomere instability was associated with the CTAGGG variant repeat type in 6/7 germline mutations. Approximately 15% of sporadic colon cancers and the majority of tumours from patients with hereditary non polyposis colon cancer (HNPCC) are caused by defects in genes involved in the mismatch repair pathway. Such defects result in an accummulation of mutations, particularly at microsatellite loci. A high mutation frequency was observed in the 12q and Xp/Yp telomere repeat arrays in colon cancers and was particularly associated with tumours showing microsatellite instability. The observed tumour mutations also involved increases or decreases in blocks of like-repeat types and can be explained by intra-allelic mutations. In one tumour, a complex telomere mutation was provisionally identified and may represent an inter-allelic mutation event. No telomeric mutations were observed in the first kilobase of the 12q and Xp/Yp telomeres in cell-lines derived from patients suffering from the premature ageing disorder Werner syndrome. The lack of telomere mutations in Werner syndrome cells is discussed, with respect to overall telomere stability.
author Pickett, Hilda A.
author_facet Pickett, Hilda A.
author_sort Pickett, Hilda A.
title Molecular characterisation of instability in human telomere repeat arrays
title_short Molecular characterisation of instability in human telomere repeat arrays
title_full Molecular characterisation of instability in human telomere repeat arrays
title_fullStr Molecular characterisation of instability in human telomere repeat arrays
title_full_unstemmed Molecular characterisation of instability in human telomere repeat arrays
title_sort molecular characterisation of instability in human telomere repeat arrays
publisher University of Leicester
publishDate 2002
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.697126
work_keys_str_mv AT picketthildaa molecularcharacterisationofinstabilityinhumantelomererepeatarrays
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