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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The binding of
Mdm2
to
p53
is required for targeting
p53
for degradation. p73, however, binds to
Mdm2
but is refractory to
Mdm2
-mediated degradation, indicating that binding to
Mdm2
is not sufficient for degradation. By utilizing the structural homology between
p53
and p73, we generated
p53
-p73 chimeras to determine the sequence element unique to
p53
essential for regulation of its stability. We found that replacing an element consisting of amino acids 92 to 112 of
p53
with the corresponding region of p73 results in a protein that is not degradable by
Mdm2
. Removal of amino acids 92 to 112 of
p53
by deletion also results in a non-
Mdm2
-degradable protein. Significantly, the finding that swapping this fragment converts p73 from refractory to sensitive to
Mdm2
-mediated degradation supports the conclusion that the amino acids 92 to 112 of
p53
function as a degradation signal. We propose that the presence of an additional protein recognizes the degradation signal and coordinates with
Mdm2
to target
p53
for degradation. Our finding opens the possibility of searching for the additional protein, which most likely plays a critical role in the regulation of
p53
stability and therefore function.
...
PMID:Identification of a sequence element from p53 that signals for Mdm2-targeted degradation. 1064 10
Identification of
Mdm2
and JNK as proteins that target degradation of wt
p53
prompted us to examine their effect on mutant p53, which exhibits a prolonged half-life. Of five mutant p53 forms studied for association with the targeting molecules, two no longer bound to
Mdm2
and JNK. Three mutant forms, which exhibit high expression levels, showed lower affinity for association with
Mdm2
and JNK in concordance with greater affinity to p14(ARF), which is among the stabilizing
p53
molecules. Monitoring mutant p53 stability in vitro confirmed that, while certain forms of mutant p53 are no longer affected by either JNK or
Mdm2
, others are targeted for degradation by JNK/
Mdm2
, albeit at lower efficiency when compared with wt
p53
. Expression of wt
p53
in tumor cells revealed a short half-life, suggesting that the targeting molecules are functional. Forced expression of mutant p53 in
p53
null cells confirmed pattern of association with JNK/
Mdm2
and prolonged half-life, as found in the tumor cells. Over-expression of
Mdm2
in either tumor (which do express endogenous functional
Mdm2
) or in
p53
null cells decreased the stability of mutant p53 suggesting that, despite its expression,
Mdm2
/JNK are insufficient (amount/affinity) for targeting mutant p53 degradation. Based on both in vitro and in vivo analyses, we conclude that the prolonged half-life of mutant p53 depends on the nature of the mutation, which either alters association with targeting molecules, ratio between
p53
and targeting/stabilizing molecules or targeting efficiency.
...
PMID:Analysis of JNK, Mdm2 and p14(ARF) contribution to the regulation of mutant p53 stability. 1065 7
Chk2/hcds1, the human homolog of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae RAD53/SPK1 and Schizosaccharomyces pombe cds1 DNA damage checkpoint genes, encodes a protein kinase that is post-translationally modified after DNA damage. Like its yeast homologs, the Chk2/hCds1 protein phosphorylates Cdc25C in vitro, suggesting that it arrests cells in G(2) in response to DNA damage. We expressed Chk2/hCds1 in human cells and analyzed their cell cycle profile. Wild-type, but not catalytically inactive, Chk2/hCds1 led to G(1) arrest after DNA damage. The arrest was inhibited by cotransfection of a dominant-negative
p53
mutant, indicating that Chk2/hCds1 acted upstream of
p53
. In vitro, Chk2/hCds1 phosphorylated
p53
on Ser-20 and dissociated preformed complexes of
p53
with
Mdm2
, a protein that targets
p53
for degradation. In vivo, ectopic expression of wild-type Chk2/hCds1 led to increased
p53
stabilization after DNA damage, whereas expression of a dominant-negative Chk2/hCds1 mutant abrogated both phosphorylation of
p53
on Ser-20 and
p53
stabilization. Thus, in response to DNA damage, Chk2/hCds1 stabilizes the
p53 tumor suppressor protein
leading to cell cycle arrest in G(1).
...
PMID:Chk2/hCds1 functions as a DNA damage checkpoint in G(1) by stabilizing p53. 1067
Overexpression of
Mdm2
in cancer cells with otherwise wild-type
p53
is believed to be an alternative mechanism for
p53
inactivation during carcinogenesis. Because a number of genetic alterations that inactivate
p53
, including mutation, homozygous deletion, or viral oncoprotein expression (e.g. HPV16-E6), inhibit DNA repair, we tested the hypothesis that
Mdm2
would likewise inhibit DNA repair. Repair of cisplatin-induced DNA damage was reduced in MCF7 cells overexpressing
Mdm2
, compared to MCF7 cells in which wild-type
p53
function was intact. MCF7-
Mdm2
cells exhibited preferential sensitivity to cisplatin and carboplatin. MCF7-
Mdm2
cells showed a pronounced S-phase arrest after cisplatin treatment, similar to that observed in mutant-
p53
cells in the present and prior studies. MCF7 cells with intact wild-type
p53
, on the other hand, arrested primarily in G2/M phase after cisplatin treatment. These findings indicate that
Mdm2
overexpression can recapitulate the effect of
p53
mutations on DNA repair of cisplatin lesions.
...
PMID:Mdm2 sensitizes MCF7 breast cancer cells to cisplatin or carboplatin. 1067 73
The ARF tumor suppressor connects pathways regulated by the retinoblastoma protein and
p53
. ARF inactivation reduces
p53
-dependent apoptosis induced by oncogenic signals. Nucleolar relocalization of
Mdm2
by ARF connotes a novel mechanism for preventing
p53
turnover and provides a framework for understanding how stress signals cooperate to regulate
p53
function.
...
PMID:The ARF/p53 pathway. 1067 83
The
p53
homologue p73 efficiently activates
p53
-responsive genes. The well documented over-expression of p73 spliced forms in a wide variety of tumor types promoted us to elucidate the mechanisms underlying p73-mediated transcription. Using the luciferase reporter gene driven by
Mdm2
-minimal promoter in
p53
null cells, we demonstrate that the weak transcriptional activity mediated by p73alpha was increased by the mutant form p73beta292, which by itself is transcriptionally inactive. Similarly, cooperation between p73beta and an inactive form of p73alpha increased p73beta-mediated transcriptional activities. Conversely, p73beta elicited a silencing effect on a gain of function mutant,
p53
(281), which by itself mediated efficient transactivation of the MDR promoter. Neither anisomycin nor actinomycin D altered p73-mediated transcriptional activities, whereas sorbitol profoundly inhibited them through a rapid proteasome-dependent degradation of p73. Our observations point to plausible scenarios in which p73, through cooperation between p73 spliced forms and suppression of gain of function mutant p53 may elicit changes in the transcription of p53 target genes that play key roles in cell growth and death.
...
PMID:p73 transcriptional activity increases upon cooperation between its spliced forms. 1069 2
The E1B-55K and E4orf6 oncoproteins of adenovirus type 5 are involved in the export of viral mRNAs. Previously, it was suggested that a complex composed of E1B-55K and E4orf6 serves as a nucleocytoplasmic transporter for viral mRNAs in which the E4orf6 protein directs both nuclear import and export. We now demonstrate that the E1B-55K protein itself shuttles efficiently in the absence of E4orf6. In addition, E1B-55K trafficking was independent of the defined shuttle proteins
Mdm2
or
p53
, which interacts with E1B-55K. The identified N-terminal E1B-55K leucine-rich nuclear-export signal (NES) conferred rapid nuclear export even in a heterologous system in contrast to the postulated E4orf6NES. Interestingly, although shuttling was blocked by inhibitors of the CRM1 mediated export pathway, E1B-55K inhibited neither the activity nor the trafficking of the retroviral shuttle proteins HIV-1 Rev and HTLV-1 Rex. In contrast, Rev or Rex blocked the nuclear export of E1B-55K, most likely by competing for essential export factors. Our results provide new insights into the regulation of the adenovirus mRNA export system and the processes of adenovirus mediated transformation. Oncogene (2000) 19, 850 - 857.
...
PMID:The adenovirus type 5 E1B-55K oncoprotein is a highly active shuttle protein and shuttling is independent of E4orf6, p53 and Mdm2. 1070 93
Chk2 is a protein kinase that is activated in response to DNA damage and may regulate cell cycle arrest. We generated Chk2-deficient mouse cells by gene targeting. Chk2-/- embryonic stem cells failed to maintain gamma-irradiation-induced arrest in the G2 phase of the cell cycle. Chk2-/- thymocytes were resistant to DNA damage-induced apoptosis. Chk2-/- cells were defective for
p53
stabilization and for induction of
p53
-dependent transcripts such as p21 in response to gamma irradiation. Reintroduction of the Chk2 gene restored
p53
-dependent transcription in response to gamma irradiation. Chk2 directly phosphorylated
p53
on serine 20, which is known to interfere with
Mdm2
binding. This provides a mechanism for increased stability of
p53
by prevention of ubiquitination in response to DNA damage.
...
PMID:DNA damage-induced activation of p53 by the checkpoint kinase Chk2. 1075 28
The ARF tumor suppressor protein stabilizes
p53
by antagonizing its negative regulator,
Mdm2
(Hdm2 in humans). Both mouse p19(ARF) and human p14(ARF) bind to the central region of
Mdm2
(residues 210 to 304), a segment that does not overlap with its N-terminal
p53
-binding domain, nuclear import or export signals, or C-terminal RING domain required for
Mdm2
E3 ubiquitin ligase activity. The N-terminal 37 amino acids of mouse p19(ARF) are necessary and sufficient for binding to
Mdm2
, localization of
Mdm2
to nucleoli, and
p53
-dependent cell cycle arrest. Although a nucleolar localization signal (NrLS) maps within a different segment (residues 82 to 101) of the human p14(ARF) protein, binding to
Mdm2
and nucleolar import of ARF-
Mdm2
complexes are both required for cell cycle arrest induced by either the mouse or human ARF proteins. Because many codons of mouse ARF mRNA are not recognized by the most abundant bacterial tRNAs, we synthesized ARF minigenes containing preferred bacterial codons. Using bacterially produced ARF polypeptides and chemically synthesized peptides conjugated to Sepharose, residues 1 to 14 and 26 to 37 of mouse p19(ARF) were found to interact independently and cooperatively with
Mdm2
, while residues 15 to 25 were dispensable for binding. Paradoxically, residues 26 to 37 of mouse p19(ARF) are also essential for ARF nucleolar localization in the absence of
Mdm2
. However, the mobilization of the p19(ARF)-
Mdm2
complex into nucleoli also requires a cryptic NrLS within the
Mdm2
C-terminal RING domain. The
Mdm2
NrLS is unmasked upon ARF binding, and its deletion prevents import of the ARF-
Mdm2
complex into nucleoli. Collectively, the results suggest that ARF binding to
Mdm2
induces a conformational change that facilitates nucleolar import of the ARF-
Mdm2
complex and
p53
-dependent cell cycle arrest. Hence, the ARF-
Mdm2
interaction can be viewed as bidirectional, with each protein being capable of regulating the subnuclear localization of the other.
...
PMID:Cooperative signals governing ARF-mdm2 interaction and nucleolar localization of the complex. 1071 75
Mdm2
has been shown to regulate
p53
stability by targeting the
p53 protein
for proteasomal degradation. We now report that
Mdm2
is a ubiquitin protein ligase (E3) for
p53
and that its activity is dependent on its RING finger. Furthermore, we show that
Mdm2
mediates its own ubiquitination in a RING finger-dependent manner, which requires no eukaryotic proteins other than ubiquitin-activating enzyme (E1) and an ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (E2). It is apparent, therefore, that
Mdm2
manifests an intrinsic capacity to mediate ubiquitination. Mutation of putative zinc coordination residues abrogated this activity, as did chelation of divalent cations. After cation chelation, the full activity could be restored by addition of zinc. We further demonstrate that the degradation of
p53
and
Mdm2
in cells requires additional potential zinc-coordinating residues beyond those required for the intrinsic activity of
Mdm2
in vitro. Replacement of the
Mdm2
RING with that of another protein (Praja1) reconstituted ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation of
Mdm2
. However, this RING was ineffective in ubiquitination and proteasomal targeting of
p53
, suggesting that there may be specificity at the level of the RING in the recognition of heterologous substrates.
...
PMID:Mdm2 is a RING finger-dependent ubiquitin protein ligase for itself and p53. 1072 42
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