Coluzzi Elisa, Colamartino Monica, Cozzi Renata, Leone Stefano, Meneghini Carlo, O'Callaghan Nathan, Sgura Antonella
Department of Science, University of "Roma Tre", Rome, Italy.
CSIRO Food and nutritional Sciences, Nutritional Genomics Laboratory, Adelaide, Australia.
PLoS One. 2014 Oct 29;9(10):e110963. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0110963. eCollection 2014.
One main function of telomeres is to maintain chromosome and genome stability. The rate of telomere shortening can be accelerated significantly by chemical and physical environmental agents. Reactive oxygen species are a source of oxidative stress and can produce modified bases (mainly 8-oxoG) and single strand breaks anywhere in the genome. The high incidence of guanine residues in telomeric DNA sequences makes the telomere a preferred target for oxidative damage. Our aim in this work is to evaluate whether chromosome instability induced by oxidative stress is related specifically to telomeric damage. We treated human primary fibroblasts (MRC-5) in vitro with hydrogen peroxide (100 and 200 µM) for 1 hr and collected data at several time points. To evaluate the persistence of oxidative stress-induced DNA damage up to 24 hrs after treatment, we analysed telomeric and genomic oxidative damage by qPCR and a modified comet assay, respectively. The results demonstrate that the genomic damage is completely repaired, while the telomeric oxidative damage persists. The analysis of telomere length reveals a significant telomere shortening 48 hrs after treatment, leading us to hypothesise that residual telomere damage could be responsible for the telomere shortening observed. Considering the influence of telomere length modulation on genomic stability, we quantified abnormal nuclear morphologies (Nucleoplasmic Bridges, Nuclear Buds and Micronuclei) and observed an increase of chromosome instability in the same time frame as telomere shortening. At subsequent times (72 and 96 hrs), we observed a restoration of telomere length and a reduction of chromosome instability, leaving us to conjecture a correlation between telomere shortening/dysfunction and chromosome instability. We can conclude that oxidative base damage leads to abnormal nuclear morphologies and that telomere dysfunction is an important contributor to this effect.
端粒的一个主要功能是维持染色体和基因组的稳定性。化学和物理环境因素可显著加速端粒缩短的速率。活性氧是氧化应激的一个来源,可在基因组的任何位置产生修饰碱基(主要是8-氧代鸟嘌呤)和单链断裂。端粒DNA序列中鸟嘌呤残基的高发生率使端粒成为氧化损伤的首选靶点。我们这项工作的目的是评估氧化应激诱导的染色体不稳定性是否与端粒损伤有特定关系。我们在体外用过氧化氢(100和200µM)处理人原代成纤维细胞(MRC-5)1小时,并在几个时间点收集数据。为了评估处理后长达24小时氧化应激诱导的DNA损伤的持续性,我们分别通过qPCR和改良彗星试验分析了端粒和基因组的氧化损伤。结果表明,基因组损伤完全修复,而端粒氧化损伤持续存在。端粒长度分析显示处理后48小时端粒显著缩短,这使我们推测观察到的端粒缩短可能是由残留的端粒损伤所致。考虑到端粒长度调节对基因组稳定性的影响,我们对异常核形态(核质桥、核芽和微核)进行了量化,并观察到在与端粒缩短相同的时间范围内染色体不稳定性增加。在随后的时间点(72和96小时),我们观察到端粒长度恢复,染色体不稳定性降低,这使我们推测端粒缩短/功能障碍与染色体不稳定性之间存在关联。我们可以得出结论,氧化碱基损伤导致异常核形态,端粒功能障碍是这种效应的一个重要促成因素。