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Wiley InterScience

Aging Cell

Aging Cell

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Volume 6 Issue 1, Pages 45 - 52

Published Online: 14 Nov 2006

Journal compilation © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd/The Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland



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Telomerase activity coevolves with body mass not lifespan
Andrei Seluanov 1 , Zhuoxun Chen 1 , Christopher Hine 1 , Tais H. C. Sasahara 2 , Antonio A. C. M. Ribeiro 2 , Kenneth C. Catania 3 , Daven C. Presgraves 1 and Vera Gorbunova 1
  1 Department of Biology, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 14627, USA
  2 Department of Surgery, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
  3 Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37232, USA
Correspondence
Vera Gorbunova, PhD, Department of Biology, University of Rochester, 213 Hutchison Hall, Rochester, NY 14627, USA. Tel.: 585-275-7740; fax: 585-275-2070; e-mail: vgorbuno@mail.rochester.edu
Copyright © 2006 The Authors
Journal compilation © Blackwell Publishing Ltd/Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2006
KEYWORDS
body mass • cancer • evolution • lifespan • rodents • telomerase

ABSTRACT

In multicellular organisms, telomerase is required to maintain telomere length in the germline but is dispensable in the soma. Mice, for example, express telomerase in somatic and germline tissues, while humans express telomerase almost exclusively in the germline. As a result, when telomeres of human somatic cells reach a critical length the cells enter irreversible growth arrest called replicative senescence. Replicative senescence is believed to be an anticancer mechanism that limits cell proliferation. The difference between mice and humans led to the hypothesis that repression of telomerase in somatic cells has evolved as a tumor-suppressor adaptation in large, long-lived organisms. We tested whether regulation of telomerase activity coevolves with lifespan and body mass using comparative analysis of 15 rodent species with highly diverse lifespans and body masses. Here we show that telomerase activity does not coevolve with lifespan but instead coevolves with body mass: larger rodents repress telomerase activity in somatic cells. These results suggest that large body mass presents a greater risk of cancer than long lifespan, and large animals evolve repression of telomerase activity to mitigate that risk.


Accepted for publication 4 October 2006

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1474-9726.2006.00262.x About DOI

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ANNOUNCEMENT

Aging Cell best paper award

Winner: Rozalyn M. Anderson

Paper: Dynamic regulation of PGC-1α localization and turnover implicates……

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