Abstract

It has been proposed that the regulation of telomerase takes place at the transcriptional level, the expression of the catalytic subunit human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) being crucial for telomerase activity (TA). Recently, differential splicing of hTERT mRNA has been demonstrated in various tissues during embryonal development, and it has been suggested that only full-length transcripts translate into functionally active telomerase. With this in view, we analyzed the different hTERT transcripts by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction in neuroblastic tumors and compared the results with the TA, the tumor growth fraction, and the MYCN status. In a series of 38 neuroblastic tumors, high TA and full-length hTERT transcripts were found in nine samples, whereas nine samples showed absence of both enzymatic activity and hTERT transcripts. Interestingly, in another eight samples, low or absent TA coincided with a lack of full-length hTERT transcripts. Eleven samples contained hTERT transcripts with low or undetectable TA and one sample had low TA but no hTERT transcripts. TA correlated with MYCN amplification and was weakly associated with the proliferative activity. Moreover, a significant correlation with tumor progression was observed. Our findings point at a posttranscriptional regulation of TA in a subset of neuroblastic tumors. Because high TA was detected only in tumors with full-length hTERT transcripts, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analysis of archival neuroblastic tumor samples might help to appraise the malignant potential in individual cases.

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