Hypothesis: Werner syndrome and biological ageing: A molecular genetic hypothesis
β Scribed by Ray Thweatt; Samuel Goldstein
- Book ID
- 102760919
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 747 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0265-9247
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β¦ Synopsis
Werner syndrome (WS) is an inherited disorder that produces somatic stunting, premature ageing and early onset of degenerative and neoplastic diseases. Cultured fibroblasts derived from subjects with W-S are found to undergo premature replicative senescence and thus provide a cellular model system to study the disorder. Recently, several overexpressed gene sequences isolated from a WS fibroblast cDNA library have been shown to possess the capacity to inhibit DNA synthesis and disrupt many normal biochemical processes. Because a similar constellation of genes is overexpressed in WS and senescent normal fibroblasts, these data suggest the existence of a common molecular genetic pathway for replicative senescence in both types of cell. We propose that the primary defect in WS is a mutation in a gene for a trans-acting repressor protein that reduces its binding affinity for shared regulatory regions of several genes, including those that encode inhibitors of DNA synthesis (IDS). The mutant WS repressor triggers a sequence of premature expression of IDS and other genes, with resulting inhibition of DNA synthesis and early cellular senescence, events which occur much later in normal cells.
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