Human telomere length is chromosome specific and conserved across individuals

Short telomeres cause age-related disease and long telomeres predispose to cancer; however, the mechanisms regulating telomere length are unclear. To probe these mechanisms, we developed a nanopore sequencing method, Telomere Profiling, that is easy to implement, precise, and cost effective with bro...

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Published inbioRxiv
Main Authors Karimian, Kayarash, Groot, Aljona, Huso, Vienna, Kahidi, Ramin, Tan, Kar-Tong, Sholes, Samantha, Keener, Rebecca, McDyer, John F, Alder, Jonathan K, Li, Heng, Rechtsteiner, Andreas, Greider, Carol W
Format Journal Article Paper
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 13.01.2024
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Edition1.2
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ISSN2692-8205
2692-8205
DOI10.1101/2023.12.21.572870

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Summary:Short telomeres cause age-related disease and long telomeres predispose to cancer; however, the mechanisms regulating telomere length are unclear. To probe these mechanisms, we developed a nanopore sequencing method, Telomere Profiling, that is easy to implement, precise, and cost effective with broad applications in research and the clinic. We sequenced telomeres from individuals with short telomere syndromes and found similar telomere lengths to the clinical FlowFISH assay. We mapped telomere reads to specific chromosome end and identified both chromosome end-specific and haplotype-specific telomere length distributions. In the T2T HG002 genome, where the average telomere length is 5kb, we found a remarkable 6kb difference in lengths between some telomeres. Further, we found that specific chromosome ends were consistently shorter or longer than the average length across 147 individuals. The presence of conserved chromosome end-specific telomere lengths suggests there are new paradigms in telomere biology that are yet to be explored. Understanding the mechanisms regulating length will allow deeper insights into telomere biology that can lead to new approaches to disease.
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Competing Interest Statement: CWG and KK are inventors of US Patent PCT/US2023/073375 titled "methods for telomere length measurement."
ISSN:2692-8205
2692-8205
DOI:10.1101/2023.12.21.572870