

One of the hallmarks of cancer is its unlimited replicative potential that needs a compensatory mechanism for the consequential telomere erosion. Telomerase promoter (TERTp) mutations were recently reported as a novel mechanism for telomerase re-activation/expression in order to maintain telomere length. Pancreatic endocrine tumors (PETs) were so far recognized to rely mainly on the alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT) mechanism. It was our objective to study if TERTp mutations were present in pancreatic endocrine tumors (PET) and could represent an alternative mechanism to ALT. TERTp mutations were detected in 7% of the cases studied and were mainly associated to patients harbouring hereditary syndromes. In vitro, using PET-derived cell lines and by luciferase reporter assay, these mutations confer a 2 to 4-fold increase in telomerase transcription activity. These novel alterations are able to recruit ETS transcription factor members, in particular GABP-α and ETV1, to the newly generated binding sites. We report for the first time TERTp mutations in PETs and PET-derived cell lines. Additionally, our data indicate that these mutations serve as an alternative mechanism and in an exclusive manner to ALT, in particular in patients with hereditary syndromes.
| EMTREE drug terms: | telomeraseTERT protein, human |
|---|---|
| EMTREE medical terms: | adolescentadultagedenzymologyfemalefluorescence in situ hybridizationgene expression regulationgenetic disordergeneticshumanmalemetabolismmiddle agedmutationpancreas tumorpathologypromoter regionsyndrometelomeretelomere homeostasistumor cell lineyoung adult |
| MeSH: | AdolescentAdultAgedCell Line, TumorFemaleGene Expression Regulation, NeoplasticGenetic Diseases, InbornHumansIn Situ Hybridization, FluorescenceMaleMiddle AgedMutationPancreatic NeoplasmsPromoter Regions, GeneticSyndromeTelomeraseTelomereTelomere HomeostasisYoung Adult |
Telomerase; TERT protein, human
Soares, P.; Instituto de Investigação e Inovação em Saúde (i3S), Universidade Do Porto, Porto, Portugal;
© Copyright 2016 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.