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Medical Forum / General / General / May 2006

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Telomerase can make us immortal

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habshi - 07 May 2006 18:52 GMT
    Its quite simple really . A drug to turn telomerase on in old
cells and another to turn it off.

excerpt
bbc
Cancer agent mysteries revealed  

The protein has proved difficult to analyse
Scientists have cracked the structure of an essential part of an
enzyme believed to play a key role in the development of many cancers.

The University of Colorado team hopes its work will help explain how
the enzyme, telomerase, acts to make cancer cells "immortal".

The scientists also hope it could lead to a new generation of more
effective cancer drugs.

Details are published in the journal Nature Structural & Molecular
Biology.

 Developing therapies that block the action of telomerase would be a
great way to treat many types of cancer

Dr Kat Arney

It is thought that over-activity of telomerase contributes to the
unchecked growth of as many as 90% of human tumours.

The researchers say a lack of detailed information about its structure
has hindered attempts to develop agents to block its effect.

Telomerase plays a key role in the development of the human embryo
during pregnancy, by extending important areas at the tips of
chromosomes called telomeres.

In most healthy adult cells the enzyme is completely shut down.

However, cancer cells find a way to turn telomerase back on -
triggering uncontrolled cell division.

'Difficult to study'

It has previously proved difficult to study telomerase in close detail
because the enzyme tends to clump together outside of cells,
preventing it from forming the ordered crystals necessary for
structural analysis.

The Colorado team solved the problem by using a fluorescent green
protein to highlight rare fragments of the enzyme that did not clump
together in the usual way.

These came from a single-celled organism called a tetrahymena - the
same organism in which telomerase was first discovered.

The researchers then used a few more biochemical tricks to crystallise
out the protein fragments, and analyse them, eventually producing an
extremely detailed three-dimensional atomic map.

They found that the protein fragment had a deep groove on its surface.

It is thought that this might be used to grab hold of the end of the
chromosome in order to extend its telomere region, and trigger
uncontrolled genetic division.

The researchers tested this theory by making tiny structural changes
to this grooved area, and found this seemed to neutralise the enzyme's
action.

Lead researcher Dr Thomas Cech said: "A molecule that would sit in
that groove looks like it would completely abolish the ability of
telomerase to work."

Dr Kat Arney, Science Information Officer at Cancer Research UK, said:
"Developing therapies that block the action of telomerase would be a
great way to treat many types of cancer.

"Thanks to this research, we now know more about the 3-D shape of the
enzyme, so scientists around the world can get to work designing drugs
to fit it precisely."

Robbie - 22 May 2006 23:50 GMT
Hi

The reason for aging is due to cell division. With each cell division
basically
the ends or the caps of the dna shorten until the dna when it divides
now has
mistakes. This is what causes are death.

We can eat good food, vitamens exercise etc... but we will never
overcome x
amount of divisions called the hayflick limit which inevitably causes
are
pathetic demise(maggot food)

However a substance called telomerase is able to
reextend the telomeres.

I would love to try to just simply simply inject telomerase to
re-extend the ends once , (you would only have to re-extend them once
every like 20 years actually)

It wouldn't be necsessary to express telomerase so that constant
reextending is occurring like cancer cells.

I'm wondering if some kind of telomerase therapy is possible.

I've been trying to find some in order test its validity

Robbie S

> Its quite simple really . A drug to turn telomerase on in old
> cells and another to turn it off.
[quoted text clipped - 75 lines]
> enzyme, so scientists around the world can get to work designing drugs
> to fit it precisely."
 
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