Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Development and maintenance of healthy stratified epithelia require the coordination of complex transcriptional programmes. The transcription factor p63, a member of the
p53
family, plays a crucial role in epithelial development and homeostasis. Analysis of the p63-dependent transcriptome indicated that one important aspect of p63 functions in epithelial development is the regulation of cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion programmes. However, limited knowledge exists on the relevant cell-cell adhesion molecules involved in physiological epithelial formation. Similarly, limited data are available to understand if deregulation of the cell-cell adhesion programme is important in tumour formation. Here, using the epidermis as an experimental model with the RNA sequencing approach, we identify a novel p63-regulated gene induced during differentiation,
ZNF185
.
ZNF185
is an actin-cytoskeleton-associated Lin-l 1, Isl-1 and Mec-3 (LIM) domain-containing protein, whose function is poorly known. We found that p63 binds to a specific enhancer region, promoting its expression to sustain epithelial differentiation.
ZNF185
silencing strongly impaired keratinocyte differentiation according to gene array analysis.
ZNF185
is detected at the cell-cell periphery where it physically interacts with E-cadherin, indicating that it is important to maintain epithelial integrity beyond its pro-differentiation role. Interestingly, poorly differentiated, including head and neck, cervical and oesophageal, squamous cell carcinomas display loss of
ZNF185
expression. Together, these studies reinforce that p63 is a crucial gene for maintaining epithelial tissue integrity and support the deregulation of the cell-cell adhesion programme,which plays a critical role in carcinoma development.
...
PMID:ZNF185 is a p63 target gene critical for epidermal differentiation and squamous cell carcinoma development. 3033 87
The transcription factor
p53
is a key player in the tumour suppressive DNA damage response and a growing number of target genes involved in these pathways has been identified.
p53
has been shown to be implicated in controlling cell motility and its mutant form enhances metastasis by loss of cell directionality, but the
p53
role in this context has not yet being investigated. Here, we report that
ZNF185
, an actin cytoskeleton-associated protein from LIM-family of Zn-finger proteins, is induced following DNA-damage. ChIP-seq analysis, chromatin crosslinking immune-precipitation experiments and luciferase assays demonstrate that
ZNF185
is a
bona fide
p53 target gene. Upon genotoxic stress, caused by DNA-damaging drug etoposide and UVB irradiation,
ZNF185
expression is up-regulated and in etoposide-treated cells,
ZNF185
depletion does not affect cell proliferation and apoptosis, but interferes with actin cytoskeleton remodelling and cell polarization. Bioinformatic analysis of different types of epithelial cancers from both TCGA and GTEx databases showed a significant decrease in
ZNF185
mRNA level compared to normal tissues. These findings are confirmed by tissue micro-array IHC staining. Our data highlight the involvement of
ZNF185
and cytoskeleton changes in
p53
-mediated cellular response to genotoxic stress and indicate
ZNF185
as potential biomarker for epithelial cancer diagnosis.
...
PMID:ZNF185 is a p53 target gene following DNA damage. 3044 32