Untangling how Shelterin safeguards telomere structure and stability – one molecule at a time

University of Sheffield

About the Project

Background:

Telomeres solve two problems with linear chromosomes: the end-replication problem, DNA loss from the end of chromosomes every replication cycle; and the end-protection problem, protection of the chromosome ends to prevent chromosome fusions. Telomere homeostasis is vital, mutations in telomeric complexes drive cancer development and premature ageing due to dysregulated telomere lengthening or shortening. Shelterin, a large protein complex, bind to telomeres and is central to maintaining telomere homeostasis. This project will use our recently developed in vitro reconstituted telomeric system to determine how Shelterin orchestrates multiple telomere activities from the single-molecule to cellular level. This approach will for the first time directly observe telomeric DNA structure, down to the resolution of the double-helix, whilst allowing direct monitoring the activity of individual Shelterin complexes. This will provide insight into how Shelterin coordinates the multiple functions of telomeres.

Objectives:

1. Generate telomeric substrates containing G-quadruplexes or R-loops

2. Determine how different telomeric structures effect activity of Shelterin at the single-molecule level

3. Probe how differences in Shelterin activity affect T-loop stability and end-protection in vivo

Novelty:

Ageing is a primary driver of some of the most prevalent chronic diseases including Alzheimer’s and cancers. Understanding the physiological mechanisms of ageing could prevent a wide variety of diseases. A lack of a reconstituted telomeric system means fundamental mechanistic details remain unknown. We have successfully purified the entire Shelterin complex and demonstrated that it is active, enabling reconstitution of Shelterin mediated telomere function in vitro. We have developed single-molecule experimental approaches tailored to this project with leading industrial partners (Lumicks, Bruker). This will facilitate the first direct visualisation of Shelterin recruitment and end-protection activities, giving unprecedented insight into how Shelterin modulates these processes.

Experimental Approach:

This project combines multiple cutting-edge single-molecule techniques, and the expertise of leaders in these fields, to allow direct visualisation of telomeric processes. In this project you will receive training in optical-tweezer with confocal microscopy, which will enable you to directly observe Shelterin activity on telomeric DNA at single-molecule resolution, and analyse detailed kinetics. You will also perform pN resolution force measurements to probe changes in telomeric DNA structure. You will also use high-resolution AFM, which will enable you to visualise different telomeric DNA structures down to the resolution of the double-helix and utilise and contribute to our open quantitative image analysis tools, integrating machine learning approaches to visualise and quantify structural features within Shelterin bound telomeric DNA. These biophysical approaches will be supported by established cellular and genetic assays to validate findings in vivo. Finally, we will characterise cancer and ageing associated mutations to understand how they dysregulate telomere function.

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