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2000
Volume 8, Issue 1
  • ISSN: 1875-6921
  • E-ISSN: 1875-6913

Abstract

Premature loss of telomere repeats underlies the pathologies of inherited bone marrow failure syndromes. Over the past decade, researchers have mapped genetic lesions responsible for the accelerated loss of telomere repeats. Haploinsufficiencies in the catalytic core components of the telomere maintenance enzyme telomerase, as well as genetic defects in telomerase holoenzyme components responsible for enzyme stability, have been linked to hematopoietic failure pathologies. Frequencies of these disease-associated alleles in human populations are low. Accordingly, the diseases themselves are rare. On the other hand, single nucleotide polymorphisms of telomerase enzyme components are found with much higher frequencies, with several non-synonymous SNP alleles observed in 2-4% of the general population. Importantly, recent advents of molecular diagnostic techniques have uncovered links between telomere length maintenance deficiencies and an increasing number of pathologies unrelated to the hematopoietic system. In these cases, short telomere length correlates to tissue renewal capacities and predicts clinical progression and disease severity. To the authors of this review, these new discoveries imply that even minor genetic defects in telomere maintenance can culminate in the premature failure of tissue compartments with high renewal rates. In this review, we discuss the biology and molecules of telomere maintenance, and the pathologies associated with an accelerated loss of telomeres, along with their etiologies. We also discuss single nucleotide polymorphisms of key telomerase components and their association with tissue renewal deficiency syndromes and other pathologies. We suggest that inter-individual variability in telomere maintenance capacity could play a significant role in chronic inflammatory diseases, and that this is not yet fully appreciated in the translational research of pharmacogenomics and personalized medicine.

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/content/journals/cppm/10.2174/1875692111008010007
2010-03-01
2025-09-05
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/content/journals/cppm/10.2174/1875692111008010007
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