Abstract

Telomerase underpins stem cell renewal and proliferation and is required for most neoplasia. Recent studies suggest that hormones and growth factors play physiological roles in regulating telomerase activity. In this report we show a rapid repression of the telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) gene by transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) in normal and neoplastic cells by a mechanism depending on the intracellular signaling protein Smad3. In human breast cancer cells TGF-beta induces rapid entry of Smad3 into the nucleus where it binds to the TERT gene promoter and represses TERT gene transcription. Silencing Smad3 gene expression or genetically deleting the Smad3 gene disrupts TGF-beta repression of TERT gene expression. Expression of the Smad3 antagonist, Smad7, also interrupts TGF-beta-mediated Smad3-induced repression of the TERT gene. Mutational analysis identified the Smad3 site on the TERT gene promoter, mediating TERT repression. In response to TGF-beta, Smad3 binds to c-Myc; knocking down c-Myc, Smad3 does not bind to the TERT gene, suggesting that c-Myc recruits Smad3 to the TERT promoter. Thus, TGF-beta negatively regulates telomerase activity via Smad3 interactions with c-Myc and the TERT gene promoter. Modifying the interaction between Smad3 and TERT gene may, thus, lead to novel strategies to regulate telomerase.

Highlights

  • National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia

  • TGF-␤ Suppression of human TERT (hTERT) Gene Expression and Telomerase Activity in Normal, Highly Proliferative, and Cancerous Cells—TGF-␤ has an inhibitory effect on cell proliferation in normal development, acting as a tumor suppressor [51, 52]

  • To determine whether the growth inhibitory effect of TGF-␤ is mediated by regulating telomerase activity, we determined the concentration- and time-dependent effect of TGF-␤ on telomerase activity and gene expression of hTERT in MCF-7 breast cancer cells

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Summary

Introduction

National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. To further address the hypothesis that Smad3 directly interacts with the hTERT gene in response to TGF-␤ stimulation, we performed in vitro electrophoresis gel mobility shift assays with MFC-7 cell nuclear proteins and a 32P-labeled hTERT promoter DNA probe containing the Ϫ262CAGAϪ259 sequence.

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