Telomerase: An RNP Enzyme Synthesizes DNA

  1. Kathleen Collins2
  1. 1Morris Herztein Endowed Professor in Biology and Physiology, University of California, San Francisco, California 94158-2517
  2. 2Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Department of Molecular & Cell Biology, Berkeley, California 94720-3200
  1. Correspondence: elizabeth.blackburn{at}ucsf.edu

SUMMARY

Telomerase is a eukaryotic ribonucleoprotein (RNP) whose specialized reverse transcriptase action performs de novo synthesis of one strand of telomeric DNA. The resulting telomerase-mediated elongation of telomeres, which are the protective end-caps for eukaryotic chromosomes, counterbalances the inevitable attrition from incomplete DNA replication and nuclease action. The telomerase strategy to maintain telomeres is deeply conserved among eukaryotes, yet the RNA component of telomerase, which carries the built-in template for telomeric DNA repeat synthesis, has evolutionarily diverse size and sequence. Telomerase shows a distribution of labor between RNA and protein in aspects of the polymerization reaction. This article first describes the underlying conservation of a core set of structural features of telomerase RNAs important for the fundamental polymerase activity of telomerase. These include a pseudoknot-plus-template domain and at least one other RNA structural motif separate from the template-containing domain. The principles driving the diversity of telomerase RNAs are then explored. Much of the diversification of telomerase RNAs has come from apparent gain-of-function elaborations, through inferred evolutionary acquisitions of various RNA motifs used for telomerase RNP biogenesis, cellular trafficking of enzyme components, and regulation of telomerase action at telomeres. Telomerase offers broadly applicable insights into the interplay of protein and RNA functions in the context of an RNP enzyme.



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      1. Cold Spring Harb. Perspect. Biol. 3: a003558 Copyright © 2011 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; all rights reserved

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