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Structure of Tetrahymena telomerase-bound CST with polymerase α-primase.

Yao HeHe SongHenry ChanBaocheng LiuYaqiang WangLukas SušacZ Hong ZhouJuli Feigon
Published in: Nature (2022)
Telomeres are the physical ends of linear chromosomes. They are composed of short repeating sequences (such as TTGGGG in the G-strand for Tetrahymena thermophila) of double-stranded DNA with a single-strand 3' overhang of the G-strand and, in humans, the six shelterin proteins: TPP1, POT1, TRF1, TRF2, RAP1 and TIN2 1,2 . TPP1 and POT1 associate with the 3' overhang, with POT1 binding the G-strand 3 and TPP1 (in complex with TIN2 4 ) recruiting telomerase via interaction with telomerase reverse transcriptase 5 (TERT). The telomere DNA ends are replicated and maintained by telomerase 6 , for the G-strand, and subsequently DNA polymerase α-primase 7,8 (PolαPrim), for the C-strand 9 . PolαPrim activity is stimulated by the heterotrimeric complex CTC1-STN1-TEN1 10-12 (CST), but the structural basis of the recruitment of PolαPrim and CST to telomere ends remains unknown. Here we report cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures of Tetrahymena CST in the context of the telomerase holoenzyme, in both the absence and the presence of PolαPrim, and of PolαPrim alone. Tetrahymena Ctc1 binds telomerase subunit p50, a TPP1 orthologue, on a flexible Ctc1 binding motif revealed by cryo-EM and NMR spectroscopy. The PolαPrim polymerase subunit POLA1 binds Ctc1 and Stn1, and its interface with Ctc1 forms an entry port for G-strand DNA to the POLA1 active site. We thus provide a snapshot of four key components that are required for telomeric DNA synthesis in a single active complex-telomerase-core ribonucleoprotein, p50, CST and PolαPrim-that provides insights into the recruitment of CST and PolαPrim and the handoff between G-strand and C-strand synthesis.
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