At the ends of the linear chromosomes are specialized regions of DNA called  telomeres. The main function of these regions is to allow the cell to replicate  chromosome ends using the enzyme telomerase, as the enzymes that normally  replicate DNA cannot copy the extreme 3′ ends of chromosomes. These specialized  chromosome caps also help protect the DNA ends, and stop the DNA repair systems  in the cell from treating them as damage to be corrected. In human cells,  telomeres are usually lengths of single-stranded DNA containing several thousand  repeats of a simple TTAGGG sequence.
These guanine-rich sequences may  stabilize chromosome ends by forming structures of stacked sets of four-base  units, rather than the usual base pairs found in other DNA molecules. Here, four  guanine bases form a flat plate and these flat four-base units then stack on top  of each other, to form a stable G-quadruplex structure. These structures are  stabilized by hydrogen bonding between the edges of the bases and chelation of a  metal ion in the centre of each four-base unit. Other structures can also be  formed, with the central set of four bases coming from either a single strand  folded around the bases, or several different parallel strands, each  contributing one base to the central structure.
In addition to these  stacked structures, telomeres also form large loop structures called telomere  loops, or T-loops. Here, the single-stranded DNA curls around in a long circle  stabilized by telomere-binding proteins. At the very end of the T-loop, the  single-stranded telomere DNA is held onto a region of double-stranded DNA by the  telomere strand disrupting the double-helical DNA and base pairing to one of the  two strands. This triple-stranded structure is called a displacement loop