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TERRA long noncoding RNA: At the interphase of telomere damage, rescue and signaling

Eftychia Kyriacou, Joachim Lingner

2024Current Opinion in Cell Biology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

TERRA long noncoding RNAs play key roles in telomere function and maintenance. They can orchestrate telomeric chromatin remodeling, regulate telomere maintenance by telomerase and homology-directed repair, and they participate in the telomeric DNA damage response. TERRA associates with chromosome ends through base-pairing forming R-loops, which are mediated by the RAD51 DNA recombinase and its partner RAD51AP1. Telomeric R-loops interfere with replication fork progression, stimulating a switch of telomere maintenance from semiconservative DNA replication to homology-directed repair (HDR). The latter mechanism is exploited by a subset of cancer cells that lack telomerase, referred to as ALT. In addition, TERRA stimulates HDR at short telomeres during aging, delaying cellular senescence. During carcinogenesis, when cells with eroded telomeres enter replicative crisis, TERRA acts as a signaling molecule to mediate autophagic cell death.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyTelomereNon-coding RNALong non-coding RNARNADNA damageInterphaseCell biologyGeneticsComputational biologyGeneDNATelomeres, Telomerase, and SenescenceRNA regulation and diseaseCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research
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