Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Lea Harrington is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Lea Harrington.


Current Biology | 1998

Reconstitution of human telomerase activity in vitro

Tara L. Beattie; Wen Zhou; Murray O. Robinson; Lea Harrington

Telomerase is a ribonucleoprotein enzyme complex that adds single-stranded telomere DNA to chromosome ends [1]. The RNA component of telomerase contains the template for telomeric DNA addition and is essential for activity [1,2]. Telomerase proteins have been identified in ciliates, yeast and mammals [3-12]. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the Est2 protein is homologous to the 123 kDa reverse transcriptase subunit of Euplotes telomerase, and is essential for telomerase activity [8]. In humans, telomerase activity is associated with the telomerase RNA hTR [13], the telomerase RNA-binding protein TP1/TLP1 [5,12] and the TP2 protein encoded by the human EST2 homolog [12] (also known as TRT1, hEST2 or TCS1 [9-11]). The minimal complex sufficient for activity is, however, unknown. We have reconstituted human telomerase activity in reticulocyte lysates and find that only exogenous hTR and TP2 are required for telomerase activity in vitro. Recognition of telomerase RNA by TP2 was species specific, and nucleotides 10-159 of hTR were sufficient for telomerase activity. Telomerase activity immunoprecipitated from the reticulocyte lysate contained hTR and recombinant TP2. Substitution of conserved amino acid residues in the reverse transcriptase domain of TP2 completely abolished telomerase activity. We suggest that TP2 and hTR might represent the minimal catalytic core of human telomerase.


Current Biology | 2000

The telomerase reverse transcriptase is limiting and necessary for telomerase function in vivo

Y Liu; Bryan E. Snow; M.P Hande; D Yeung; Natalie Erdmann; Andrew Wakeham; A Itie; D.P Siderovski; Peter M. Lansdorp; Murray O. Robinson; Lea Harrington

Mammalian telomerase is essential for the maintenance of telomere length [1-5]. Its catalytic core comprises a reverse transcriptase component (TERT) and an RNA component. While the biochemical role of mammalian TERT is well established [6-11], it is unknown whether it is sufficient for telomere-length maintenance, chromosome stability or other cellular processes. Cells from mice in which the mTert gene had been disrupted showed progressive loss of telomere DNA, a phenotype similar to cells in which the gene encoding the telomerase RNA component (mTR) has been disrupted [1,12]. On prolonged growth, mTert-deficient embryonic stem (ES) cells exhibited genomic instability, aneuploidy and telomeric fusions. ES cells heterozygous for the mTert disruption also showed telomere attrition, a phenotype that differs from heterozygous mTR cells [12]. Thus, telomere maintenance in mammals is carried out by a single, limiting TERT.


Current Biology | 2003

Functional Conservation of the Telomerase Protein Est1p in Humans

Bryan E. Snow; Natalie Erdmann; Jennifer Cruickshank; Hartt Goldman; R.Montgomery Gill; Murray O. Robinson; Lea Harrington

Eukaryotic telomerase contains a telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) and an RNA template component that are essential for telomerase catalytic activity and several other telomerase-associated factors of which only a few appear to be integral enzyme components [1-3]. The first essential telomerase protein identified was S. cerevisiae Est1p, whose deletion leads to ever-shorter telomeres despite the persistence of telomerase activity [4-6]. Extensive genetic and biochemical data show that Est1p, via its interaction with the telomerase RNA and telomere end DNA binding complex Cdc13p/Stn1p/Ten1p, promotes the ability of telomerase to elongate telomeres in vivo [7-22]. The characterization of Est1p homologs outside of yeast has not been documented. We report the characterization of two putative human homologs of Est1p, hEST1A and hEST1B. Both proteins specifically associated with telomerase activity in human cell extracts and bound hTERT in rabbit reticulocyte lysates independently of the telomerase RNA. Overproduction of hEST1A cooperated with hTERT to lengthen telomeres, an effect that was specific to cells containing telomerase activity. Like Est1p, hEST1A (but not hEST1B) exhibited a single-stranded telomere DNA binding activity. These results suggest that the telomerase-associated factor Est1p is evolutionarily conserved in humans.


Cell | 2006

A Genome-Wide Screen Identifies the Evolutionarily Conserved KEOPS Complex as a Telomere Regulator

Michael Downey; Rebecca Houlsworth; Laura Maringele; Adrienne Rollie; Marc Brehme; Sarah Galicia; Sandrine Guillard; Melanie Partington; Mikhajlo K. Zubko; Nevan J. Krogan; Andrew Emili; Jack Greenblatt; Lea Harrington; David Lydall; Daniel Durocher

Telomere capping is the essential function of telomeres. To identify new genes involved in telomere capping, we carried out a genome-wide screen in Saccharomyces cerevisiae for suppressors of cdc13-1, an allele of the telomere-capping protein Cdc13. We report the identification of five novel suppressors, including the previously uncharacterized gene YML036W, which we name CGI121. Cgi121 is part of a conserved protein complex -- the KEOPS complex -- containing the protein kinase Bud32, the putative peptidase Kae1, and the uncharacterized protein Gon7. Deletion of CGI121 suppresses cdc13-1 via the dramatic reduction in ssDNA levels that accumulate in cdc13-1 cgi121 mutants. Deletion of BUD32 or other KEOPS components leads to short telomeres and a failure to add telomeres de novo to DNA double-strand breaks. Our results therefore indicate that the KEOPS complex promotes both telomere uncapping and telomere elongation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2006

The Retinoblastoma Protein Regulates Pericentric Heterochromatin

Christian E. Isaac; Sarah M. Francis; Alison L. Martens; Lisa M. Julian; Laurie A. Seifried; Natalie Erdmann; Ulrich K. Binné; Lea Harrington; Piotr Sicinski; Nathalie G. Bérubé; Nicholas J. Dyson; Frederick A. Dick

ABSTRACT The retinoblastoma protein (pRb) has been proposed to regulate cell cycle progression in part through its ability to interact with enzymes that modify histone tails and create a repressed chromatin structure. We created a mutation in the murine Rb1 gene that disrupted pRbs ability to interact with these enzymes to determine if it affected cell cycle control. Here, we show that loss of this interaction slows progression through mitosis and causes aneuploidy. Our experiments reveal that while the LXCXE binding site mutation does not disrupt pRbs interaction with the Suv4-20h histone methyltransferases, it dramatically reduces H4-K20 trimethylation in pericentric heterochromatin. Disruption of heterochromatin structure in this chromosomal region leads to centromere fusions, chromosome missegregation, and genomic instability. These results demonstrate the surprising finding that pRb uses the LXCXE binding cleft to control chromatin structure for the regulation of events beyond the G1-to-S-phase transition.


Oncogene | 2004

Does the reservoir for self-renewal stem from the ends?

Lea Harrington

Stem cell research is a burgeoning field with an alluring potential for therapeutic intervention, and thus begs a critical understanding of the long-term consequences of stem cell replacement. Operationally, a stem cell may be defined as a rarely dividing cell with the capacity for self-renewal throughout the lifetime of the organism, and an ability to reconstitute its appropriate lineages via proliferation and differentiation. In many differentiated normal and cancer cell types, the maintenance of telomeres plays a pivotal role in their continued division potential. Taken together with the presence of the enzymatic activity responsible for telomere addition, telomerase, in several progenitor cell lineages, it is presumed that telomere maintenance will be critical for the replenishment of stem cells or their successors. The purpose of this review is to discuss the role of telomere length maintenance in self-renewal, and the consequent challenges and potential pitfalls to the manipulation of normal and cancer-derived stem cells.


Oncogene | 2002

Telomere dysfunction: multiple paths to the same end

Lea Harrington; Murray O. Robinson

The molecular cloning of telomerase and telomere components has enabled the analysis and precise manipulation of processes that regulate telomere length maintenance. In mammalian cells and in other organisms, we now recognize that disruption of telomere integrity via any one of a number of perturbations induces chromosome instability and the activation of DNA damage responses. Thus, telomere dysfunction may represent a physiological trigger of the DNA damage or apoptotic response in an analogous fashion to other genotoxic insults that introduce chromosome breaks. Initial studies in mice lacking the murine telomerase RNA and in cells expressing a dominant negative version of the telomere binding protein TRF2 revealed a strong p53-dependent response to telomere dysfunction. Yet, telomere dysfunction exhibits p53-independent effects as well, an observation supported by p53-independent responses to telomere dysfunction in p53 mutant human tumor cell lines and mouse cells. As most tumors are compromised for p53 function, examination of this p53-independent response warrants closer attention. A better understanding of this p53-independent response may prove critical for determining the ultimate utility of telomerase inhibitors in the clinic. This review will summarize our current understanding of the molecular responses to telomere dysfunction in mammalian cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007

Murine Pif1 Interacts with Telomerase and Is Dispensable for Telomere Function In Vivo

Bryan E. Snow; Maria K. Mateyak; Jana Paderova; Andrew Wakeham; Caterina Iorio; Virginia A. Zakian; Jeremy A. Squire; Lea Harrington

ABSTRACT Pif1 is a 5′-to-3′ DNA helicase critical to DNA replication and telomere length maintenance in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. ScPif1 is a negative regulator of telomeric repeat synthesis by telomerase, and recombinant ScPif1 promotes the dissociation of the telomerase RNA template from telomeric DNA in vitro. In order to dissect the role of mPif1 in mammals, we cloned and disrupted the mPif1 gene. In wild-type animals, mPif1 expression was detected only in embryonic and hematopoietic lineages. mPif1−/− mice were viable at expected frequencies, displayed no visible abnormalities, and showed no reproducible alteration in telomere length in two different null backgrounds, even after several generations. Spectral karyotyping of mPif1−/− fibroblasts and splenocytes revealed no significant change in chromosomal rearrangements. Furthermore, induction of apoptosis or DNA damage revealed no differences in cell viability compared to what was found for wild-type fibroblasts and splenocytes. Despite a novel association of mPif1 with telomerase, mPif1 did not affect the elongation activity of telomerase in vitro. Thus, in contrast to what occurs with ScPif1, murine telomere homeostasis or genetic stability does not depend on mPif1, perhaps due to fundamental differences in the regulation of telomerase and/or telomere length between mice and yeast or due to genetic redundancy with other DNA helicases.


Developmental Biology | 1991

Developmental analysis of ocular morphogenesis in αA-crystallin/diphtheria toxin transgenic mice undergoing ablation of the lens☆

Lea Harrington; Gordon K. Klintworth; Thomas E. Secor; Martin L. Breitman

The role of the lens in early eye development was examined in transgenic mice carrying the cytotoxic diphtheria toxin A gene driven by hamster alpha A-crystallin promoter sequences. Mice hemizygous for this construct are microphthalmic and contain a vacuolated and highly disorganized lens, whereas adult homozygous mice are completely ablated of the lens and lack a pupil, aqueous and posterior chamber, vitreous humor, iris, and ciliary body and show extensive convolution of the sensory retina. Developmental analysis of animals homozygous for the transgene revealed that the optic cup and lens vesicle form normally and that ablation of the lens occurs as a gradual degenerative process beginning between Days 12 and 13 of gestation. Degeneration of the lens vesicle coincides with retarded growth and development of the neuroretina, sclera, and cornea. The anterior lip of the optic cup fails to differentiate into the normal epithelium of the iris and ciliary body and the vitreous body does not develop. Although the retinal layers apparently form normally, retinal folding becomes prominent following lens degeneration. These results suggest that development of a functional lens from Embryonic Day 12.5 onward is critical for formation of the ciliary epithelium, iris, and vitreous body, as well as for appropriate growth, development, and maintenance of morphology of the retina, cornea, sclera, and optic nerve. Our results also provide information on the time course of DT-A-mediated cell destruction in vivo and are discussed in context with previous lens ablation studies and the importance of developmental analysis for interpretation of the extent to which morphogenetic aberrations are concurrent with or secondary to genetic ablation of the target tissue.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

The N-terminus of hTERT contains a DNA-binding domain and is required for telomerase activity and cellular immortalization

David C. F. Sealey; Le Zheng; Michael A. S. Taboski; Jennifer Cruickshank; Mitsuhiko Ikura; Lea Harrington

Telomerase defers the onset of telomere damage-induced signaling and cellular senescence by adding DNA onto chromosome ends. The ability of telomerase to elongate single-stranded telomeric DNA depends on the reverse transcriptase domain of TERT, and also relies on protein:DNA contacts outside the active site. We purified the N-terminus of human TERT (hTEN) from Escherichia coli, and found that it binds DNA with a preference for telomeric sequence of a certain length and register. hTEN interacted with the C-terminus of hTERT in trans to reconstitute enzymatic activity in vitro. Mutational analysis of hTEN revealed that amino acids Y18 and Q169 were required for telomerase activity in vitro, but not for the interaction with telomere DNA or the C-terminus. These mutants did not reconstitute telomerase activity in cells, maintain telomere length, or extend cellular lifespan. In addition, we found that T116/T117/S118, while dispensable in vitro, were required for cellular immortalization. Thus, the interactions of hTEN with telomere DNA and the C-terminus of hTERT are functionally separable from the role of hTEN in telomere elongation activity in vitro and in vivo, suggesting other roles for the protein and nucleic acid interactions of hTEN within, and possibly outside, the telomerase catalytic core.

Collaboration


Dive into the Lea Harrington's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Natalie Erdmann

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bryan E. Snow

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew Wakeham

University Health Network

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Catherine LeBel

University Health Network

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jennifer Cruickshank

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rena Oulton

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge