iScience
Volume 26, Issue 1, 20 January 2023, 105850
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Article
Alternative telomere maintenance mechanism in Alligator sinensis provides insights into aging evolution

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2022.105850Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Alligator sinensis showed no telomere shortening; TERT expression is absent in adults

  • ATM experienced positive selection on A. sinensis and shared mutation ATMD1815N

  • Repressed ATM expression with critical mutations suggested their fitness optimum shift

  • ALT-related genes were clustered in a high expression pattern in A. sinensis

Summary

Lifespan is a life-history trait that undergoes natural selection. Telomeres are hallmarks of aging, and shortening rate predicts species lifespan, making telomere maintenance mechanisms throughout different lifespans a worthy topic for study. Alligators are suitable for the exploration of anti-aging molecular mechanisms, because they exhibit low or even negligible mortality in adults and no significant telomere shortening. Telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) expression is absent in the adult Alligator sinensis, as in humans. Selection analyses on telomere maintenance genes indicated that ATM, FANCE, SAMHD1, HMBOX1, NAT10, and MAP3K4 experienced positive selection on A. sinensis. Repressed pleiotropic ATM kinase in A. sinensis suggests their fitness optimum shift. In ATM downstream, Alternative Lengthening of Telomeres (ALT)-related genes were clustered in a higher expression pattern in A. sinensis, which covers 10–15% of human cancers showing no telomerase activities. In summary, we demonstrated how telomere shortening, telomerase activities, and ALT contributed to anti-aging strategies.

Subject areas

Zoology
Molecular biology
Evolutionary biology

Data and code availability

RNA-seq data have been deposited at Sequence Read Archive (SRA) data in NCBI and are publicly available as of the date of publication. Accession numbers are listed in the key resources table.

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