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KMID : 0361019990420010082
Korean Journal of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery
1999 Volume.42 No. 1 p.82 ~ p.87
Telomerase Activity in Oral Leukoplakia Tissues
Å°æ/Kyung Tae
¾È¸íÁÖ*/ÀÌÇü¼®/¹Ú¹üÁ¤/¾È°æ¼º/Myung Ju Ahn*/Hyung Seok Lee/Bum Jung Park/Kyung Sung Ahn
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Telomeres are specialized structures found at the ends of eukaryotic chromosomes. Telomeres stabilize the chromosome and protect DNA from illegitimate recombination. Telomerase is a ribonucleoprotein, a RNA
dependent
DNA polymerase, and acts as a reverse transcriptase-like enzyme, which maintains telomere length by adding telomeric repeat units of TTAGGG to the telomeric end. These telomeric repeat units have been found only in cells with unlimited
replicative
potential such as sperm cells, immortalized cell lines and cancer tissues, but not in normal somatic cells. Telomerase is believed to be characteristic of and may be the best indicator of cell immortality. This study was performed to indentify
the
role
of telomerase activity in the multistep carcinogenesis of oral squamous cell carcinoma. Materials and Methods: We performed a telomeric repeat amplification protocol assay in 10 oral leukoplakia, 5 tongue cancers and 10 normal oral mucosa
tissues. Results: All the five tongue cancer tissues showed telomerase activity. Although telomerase activity was detected in 9 of 10 oral leukoplakia tissues and in 9 of 10 normal oral mucosa tissues, the activity of telomerase was low
compared
to that of cancer tissue by semiquantitative analysis. Conclusion: These findings suggest that telomerase maybe play a key role in multistep carcinogenesis of oral malignancy. Telomerase activity was detectable in normal oral mucosa with
renewal
activity suggested that this enzyme might be an indicator of cell proliferation.
KEYWORD
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