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Telomere dysfunction promotes cholangiocyte senescence and biliary fibrosis in primary sclerosing cholangitis
Nidhi Jalan-Sakrikar, Abid Anwar, Usman Yaqoob, Can Gan, Anthony B. Lagnado, Alexander Q. Wixom, Diana Jurk, Robert C. Huebert
Nidhi Jalan-Sakrikar, Abid Anwar, Usman Yaqoob, Can Gan, Anthony B. Lagnado, Alexander Q. Wixom, Diana Jurk, Robert C. Huebert
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Research Article Gastroenterology Hepatology

Telomere dysfunction promotes cholangiocyte senescence and biliary fibrosis in primary sclerosing cholangitis

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Abstract

Cellular senescence and biliary fibrosis are prototypical features of obliterative cholangiopathies, such as primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). Telomere dysfunction can lead to senescence either through telomere erosion or damaged telomeres. Our goal was to investigate a mechanistic relationship between telomere damage and biliary fibrosis in PSC. Telomere attrition was observed in the bile ducts of patients with PSC along with a reduction in telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) expression, compared with that in normal livers. Similarly, liver tissue from mouse models of biliary fibrosis showed telomere attrition with increased damage at telomeres measured as telomere-associated foci (TAF). Cellular models of senescence induction increased the TAF in cholangiocytes. This coincided with decreased TERT expression and increased senescence, which was rescued by modulating TERT levels. Epigenetic analysis revealed increased acquisition of repressive histone methylation at the TERT promoter, which correlated with decreased TERT transcription. Cholangiocyte-selective deletion of TERT in mice exacerbated fibrosis, whereas androgen therapy toward telomerase rescued liver fibrosis and liver function in a genetic mouse model of PSC. Our results demonstrate a mechanistic role for telomere dysfunction in cellular senescence and fibrosis that characterize PSC. This suggests that PSC may be, in part, a telomere biology disorder, and identifies TERT as a potential therapeutic target.

Authors

Nidhi Jalan-Sakrikar, Abid Anwar, Usman Yaqoob, Can Gan, Anthony B. Lagnado, Alexander Q. Wixom, Diana Jurk, Robert C. Huebert

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Figure 6

Epigenetic regulation of TERT modulates cholangiocyte senescence.

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Epigenetic regulation of TERT modulates cholangiocyte senescence.
(A) Ch...
(A) ChIP analysis for H3K9me3 at the TERT promoter reveals increased occupancy in cholangiocytes exposed to irradiation (IRR). **P < 0.01, paired, 2-tailed t test. All error bars are SEM; n = 3. (B) IB in cholangiocytes for TERT, p21, Ki-67, and HSC70 (loading control) treated with chaetocin or DMSO. Densitometry data (bar graphs) reveal reduced p21 protein levels with irradiation upon treatment with chaetocin, which increases TERT expression. *P < 0.01, **P < 0.001, 1 way ANOVA followed by Tukey’s post-test. All error bars are SEM; n = 3. (C) ChIP-Seq for H3K27ac in control and irradiated cholangiocytes showing gain in new sites upon irradiation (green). (D) Motif enrichment analysis of regions gaining occupancy of H3K27ac with irradiation reveals senescence-associated transcription factors. (E) Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathway analysis of genes enriched with H3K27ac shows senescence-related pathways.

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