Telomerase gene therapy ameliorates the effects of neurodegeneration associated to short telomeres in mice

Kurt Whittemore, Aksinya Derevyanko, Paula Martinez, Rosa Serrano, Marti Pumarola Batlle, Maria Fatima Bosch Tubert, Maria A. Blasco

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículoInvestigación

Resumen

Neurodegenerative diseases associated with old age such as Alzheimer's disease present major problems for society, and they currently have no cure. The telomere protective caps at the ends of chromosomes shorten with age, and when they become critically short, they can induce a persistent DNA damage response at chromosome ends, triggering secondary cellular responses such as cell death and cellular senescence. Mice and humans with very short telomeres owing to telomerase deficiencies have an earlier onset of pathologies associated with loss of the regenerative capacity of tissues. However, the effects of short telomeres in very low proliferative tissues such as the brain have not been thoroughly investigated. Here, we describe a mouse model of neurodegeneration owing to presence of short telomeres in the brain as the consequence of telomerase deficiency. Interestingly, we find similar signs of neurodegeneration in very old mice as the consequence of physiological mouse aging. Next, we demonstrate that delivery of telomerase gene therapy to the brain of these mice results in amelioration of some of these neurodegeneration phenotypes. These findings suggest that short telomeres contribute to neurodegeneration diseases with aging and that telomerase activation may have a therapeutic value in these diseases.
Idioma originalInglés
Páginas (desde-hasta)2916-2948
Número de páginas33
PublicaciónAging
Volumen11
N.º10
DOI
EstadoPublicada - 31 may 2019

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