Abstract

Expressing oncogenes in normal somatic human cells leads to cellular senescence after just a few cell division cycles. In cells that are more resistant to culture stresses, such as human dermal fibroblasts, this oncogene-induced senescence (OIS) is a result of a DNA damage response (DDR) that is activated due to the formation of DNA lesions at both non-telomeric and telomeric DNA sequences. DNA lesions can be visualized as DDR foci by immunofluorescence microscopy using antibodies against a number of DDR factors, including ϒ-H2AX and 53BP1. Over time and as cells remain arrested in OIS, non-telomeric DDR foci progressively become resolved, while telomeric DDR foci, also called dysfunctional telomeres, persist. Here we describe a protocol to detect dysfunctional telomeres in cultured human cells, to monitor a temporal enrichment of dysfunctional telomeres in cells that had undergone OIS, and to detect dysfunctional telomeres in paraffin-embedded and formalin-fixed human tissue.

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