Telomere Science Library

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about the Nobel-Prize Winning Science of Telomere Biology

Telomerase Reverse Transcriptase Delays Aging in Cancer-Resistant Mice

Antonia Tomás-Loba1, Ignacio Flores1, Pablo J. Fernández-Marcos, María L. Cayuela1, Antonio Maraver, Agueda Tejera1, Consuelo Borrás, Ander Matheu, Peter Klatt1, Juana M. Flores, José Viña, Manuel Serrano and Maria A. Blasco1

Telomerase confers limitless proliferative potential to most human cells through its ability to elongate telomeres, the natural ends of chromosomes, which otherwise would undergo progressive attrition and eventually compromise cell viability. However, the role of telomerase in organismal aging has remained unaddressed, in part because of the cancer-promoting activity of telomerase. To circumvent this problem, we have constitutively expressed telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT), one of the components of telomerase, in mice engineered to be cancer resistant by means of enhanced expression of the tumor suppressors p53, p16, and p19ARF. In this context, TERT overexpression improves the fitness of epithelial barriers, particularly the skin and the intestine, and produces a systemic delay in aging accompanied by extension of the median life span. These results demonstrate that constitutive expression of Tert provides antiaging activity in the context of a mammalian organism.

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