학술논문

Telomerase suppression by chromosome 6 in a human papillomavirus type 16-immortalized keratinocyte cell line and in a cervical cancer cell line.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute. 6/6/2001, Vol. 93 Issue 11, p865-872. 8p. 9 Diagrams, 1 Chart.
Subject
*HUMAN chromosomes
*TELOMERASE
*PAPILLOMAVIRUS diseases
*CELL division
*CELLS
*CHROMOSOMES
*COMPARATIVE studies
*DNA
*GENES
*GENETIC techniques
*GLYCOSIDASES
*KERATINOCYTES
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL cooperation
*PAPILLOMAVIRUSES
*POLYMERASE chain reaction
*RESEARCH
*RNA
*TELOMERES
*TRANSFERASES
*DNA-binding proteins
*EVALUATION research
*REVERSE transcriptase polymerase chain reaction
*CANCER cell culture
CERVIX uteri tumors
Language
ISSN
0027-8874
Abstract
Background: High-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) types play a major role in the development of cervical cancer in vivo and can induce immortalization of primary human keratinocytes in vitro. Activation of the telomere-lengthening enzyme telomerase constitutes a key event in both processes. Because losses of alleles from chromosome 6 and increased telomerase activity have been observed in high-grade premalignant cervical lesions, we analyzed whether human chromosome 6 harbors a putative telomerase repressor locus that may be involved in HPV-mediated immortalization.Methods: Microcell-mediated chromosome transfer was used to introduce chromosomes 6 and 11 to the in vitro generated HPV type 16 (HPV16)-immortalized keratinocyte cell line FK16A and to the in vivo derived HPV16-containing cervical cancer cell line SIHA: Hybrid clones were analyzed for growth characteristics, telomerase activity, human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) and HPV16 E6 expression, and telomere length. FK16A hybrid clones were also transduced with an hTERT-containing retrovirus to examine the effect of ectopic hTERT expression on growth. Statistical tests were two-sided.Results: Introduction of human chromosome 6 but not of chromosome 11 to both cell lines yielded hybrid cells that demonstrated crisis-like features (i.e., enlarged and flattened morphology, vacuolation, and multinucleation) and underwent growth arrest after a marked lag period. In the chromosome 6 hybrid clones analyzed, telomerase activity and hTERT messenger RNA (mRNA) expression were statistically significantly reduced compared with those in the chromosome 11 hybrid clones (for telomerase activity, P =.004 for the FK16A hybrids and P =.039 for the SiHa hybrids; for hTERT mRNA expression, P =.003 for the FK16A hybrids). The observed growth arrest was associated with telomeric shortening. Ectopic expression of hTERT in FK16A cells could prevent the telomeric shortening-based growth arrest induced by chromosome 6.Conclusions: Chromosome 6 may harbor a repressor of hTERT transcription, the loss of which may be involved in HPV-mediated immortalization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]