Genes (Feb 2023)

Spotlight on <i>hTERT</i> Complex Regulation in Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphomas

  • Joana Ropio,
  • Martina Prochazkova-Carlotti,
  • Rui Batista,
  • Ana Pestana,
  • Alain Chebly,
  • Jacky Ferrer,
  • Yamina Idrissi,
  • David Cappellen,
  • Cecília Durães,
  • Paula Boaventura,
  • João Vinagre,
  • Lamia Azzi-Martin,
  • Sandrine Poglio,
  • José Cabeçadas,
  • Manuel António Campos,
  • Marie Beylot-Barry,
  • Manuel Sobrinho-Simões,
  • Jean-Philippe Merlio,
  • Paula Soares,
  • Edith Chevret

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes14020439
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 2
p. 439

Abstract

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As a major cancer hallmark, there is a sustained interest in understanding the telomerase contribution to carcinogenesis in order to therapeutically target this enzyme. This is particularly relevant in primary cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCL), a malignancy showing telomerase dysregulation with few investigative data available. In CTCL, we examined the mechanisms involved in telomerase transcriptional activation and activity regulation. We analyzed 94 CTCL patients from a Franco-Portuguese cohort, as well as 8 cell lines, in comparison to 101 healthy controls. Our results showed that not only polymorphisms (SNPs) located at the promoter of human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) gene (rs2735940 and rs2853672) but also an SNP located within the coding region (rs2853676) could influence CTCL occurrence. Furthermore, our results sustained that the post-transcriptional regulation of hTERT contributes to CTCL lymphomagenesis. Indeed, CTCL cells present a different pattern of hTERT spliced transcripts distribution from the controls, mostly marked by an increase in the hTERT β+ variants proportion. This increase seems to be associated with CTCL development and progression. Through hTERT splicing transcriptome modulation with shRNAs, we observed that the decrease in the α-β+ transcript induced a decrease in the cell proliferation and tumorigenic capacities of T-MF cells in vitro. Taken together, our data highlight the major role of post-transcriptional mechanisms regulating telomerase non canonical functions in CTCL and suggest a new potential role for the α-β+ hTERT transcript variant.

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