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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Wild-type
p53
is a tumor suppressor gene which can activate or repress transcription, as well as induce apoptosis. The human
p53
proline-rich domain localized between amino acids 64 and 92 has been reported to be necessary for efficient growth suppression. This study shows that this property mainly results from impaired apoptotic activity. Although deletion of the proline-rich domain does not affect transactivation of several promoters, such as WAF1, MDM2 and BAX, it does alter transcriptional repression, reactive oxygen species production and sequence-specific transactivation of the
PIG3
gene, and these are activities which affect apoptosis. Whereas gel retardation assays revealed that this domain did not alter in vitro the specific binding to the
p53
-responsive element of
PIG3
, this domain plays a critical role in transactivation from a synthetic promoter containing this element. To explain this discrepancy, evidence is given for a proline-rich domain-mediated cellular activation of
p53
DNA binding.
...
PMID:The requirement for the p53 proline-rich functional domain for mediation of apoptosis is correlated with specific PIG3 gene transactivation and with transcriptional repression. 970 26
OCI/AML-2 acute myeloid leukemia cells were found to undergo apoptosis after treatment with y rays from a 137Cs source. Multilaser flow cytometry techniques using probes for live cell function were used to monitor the biochemical changes that occurred prior to the loss of surface membrane integrity. These showed increases in the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and in the glutathione (GSH) content of irradiated cells. An additional population of cells that showed a further increase in ROS and depletion of GSH was seen in irradiated cells but not in controls. This population showed loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (deltapsim), indicative of the mitochondrial permeability transition, and exposure of phosphatidylserine on the cell surface. Increases in intracellular calcium were observed in a proportion of these low-deltapsi(m)/high-ROS cells. Similar findings were seen using the antileukemia drug cytosine arabinoside (ara-C), although cell cycle analysis showed that the loss of deltapsi(m) occurred mainly in G1 phase with ara-C treatment, and mainly in G2 phase with irradiation. Furthermore, the protective effect of overexpression of BCL2 was more pronounced after ara-C treatment than with radiation. Cells of the
TP53
(formerly known as
p53
)-null human AML line OCI M2 showed growth arrest in G2 phase after radiation treatment, with no loss of deltapsi(m) or morphological changes indicative of apoptosis. The flavine-dependent oxidoreductase inhibitor diphenylene iodonium failed to inhibit generation of ROS in irradiated OCI/AML-2 cells, indicating that the mechanism is unlikely to involve the
TP53
-induced gene
PIG3
. These results show that oxidative stress can occur in irradiated human leukemia "blasts", and may play a direct role in radiation-induced apoptosis.
...
PMID:An oxidative stress-mediated death pathway in irradiated human leukemia cells mapped using multilaser flow cytometry. 984 Jan 83
The
p53 tumor suppressor
is the most commonly mutated gene in human cancer.
p53 protein
is stabilized in response to different checkpoints activated by DNA damage, hypoxia, viral infection, or oncogene activation resulting in diverse biological effects, such as cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, senescence, differentiation, and antiangiogenesis. The stable
p53 protein
is activated by phosphorylation, dephosphorylation and acetylation yielding a potent sequence-specific DNA-binding transcription factor. The wide range of
p53
's biological effects can in part be explained by its activation of expression of a number of target genes including p21WAFI, GADD45, 14-3-3 sigma, bax, Fas/APO1, KILLER/DR5,
PIG3
, Tsp1, IGF-BP3 and others. This review will focus on the transcriptional targets of
p53
, their regulation by
p53
, and their relative importance in carrying out the biological effects of
p53
.
...
PMID:Regulation of p53 downstream genes. 1010
Activation of the
p53 tumor suppressor protein
can lead to either cell cycle arrest or apoptosis. Several functional domains necessary for mediating cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in
p53
have been mapped, e.g., the proline-rich domain. The proline-rich domain is located within residues 60-90, which comprise five PXXP motifs (where P represents proline and X any amino acid). To further delineate the function of the proline-rich domain and its potential role in transactivation, we generated several groups of cell lines that inducibly express various
p53
mutants using a tetracycline-regulated expression system. We found that
p53
(delta62-91), which lacks all five PXXP motifs in human
p53
, is capable of inducing cell cycle arrest but not apoptosis, while
p53
(gln22-ser23/delta62-91), which contains a double point mutation in the activation domain as well as deletion of the proline-rich domain, completely loses its activity. However,
p53
(delta74-91), which contains only one PXXP motif at its N-terminus, is not only capable of inducing cell cycle arrest but also retains a partial apoptotic activity. Furthermore, we found that deletion of the proline-rich region has no or very mild effects on activation of several transiently transfected p53 target gene promoters, i.e., the p21, MDM2, BAX, and GADD45 promoters. However, such deletion differentially affects
p53
induction of endogenous target genes, i.e., induction of p21, MDM2, BTG2, p85,
PIG3
, PIG6 and PIG11 was reduced or abrogated but induction of BAX, KILLER/DR5, PIG2, PIG7 and PIG8 was not substantially affected. Interestingly, induction of GADD45 was enhanced. These results suggest that the proline-rich region may play a role in chromatin remodeling, which counteracts chromatin-mediated repression for some of the endogenous p53 target genes.
...
PMID:Differential regulation of cellular target genes by p53 devoid of the PXXP motifs with impaired apoptotic activity. 1032 40
The transcription regulatory function of
p53
was analyzed by using two inducible
p53
systems in the human lung cancer cell line H1299. cDNA probes derived from RNA harvested 12 h after
p53
induction were used to probe filters containing cDNA arrays. Over 20 genes were found to be significantly induced or suppressed by
p53
. The induced genes can be classified mainly as cell cycle inhibitors like p21waf, GADD45, apoptosis-related genes like Fas/APO1 and
PIG3
or DNA repair genes like DDB2, DNA ligase and G/T mismatch DNA glycosylase. The suppressed genes include mainly cell cycle regulators like cyclin B1, cyclin H and kinases like c-abl, CLK1 and others. The most notable induced gene was MIC-1, encoding a TGF-beta-related secretory protein, suggesting a potential paracrine component for
p53
growth suppression.
...
PMID:Profile of gene expression regulated by induced p53: connection to the TGF-beta family. 1072 49
Somatic mutations of the tumor suppressor gene
p53
have been frequently detected in esophagal cancers, but their biological significance remains to be established. The tumor suppressor activity of
p53
results in part from its ability to transactivate genes involved in the cell cycle and apoptosis, such as p21, bax and
PIG3
, and some
p53
mutations may have a differential effect on the transactivation of these target genes. We developed yeast strains in which the activation by wild-type
p53
of reporter plasmids containing
p53
binding sites present within these target genes induces a change in the color of the colonies (red/white). Using these strains, we analyzed 56 esophageal cancers from patients residing in Normandy, France, a high incidence geographic area. Forty-seven tumors (84%), scored as mutant with the p21, bax and
PIG3
reporter strains and in most of the cases (76%), the percentage of red colonies suggested that both
p53
alleles were inactivated. Sequencing analysis allowed the identification of a
p53
mutation in each positive sample, and the spectrum of mutations was in agreement with the etiological role of tobacco and alcohol. These results confirm the high frequency of biallelic
p53
mutations in esophageal carcinoma and strongly suggest that their biological consequence is the complete alteration of the transactivation of genes involved in the cell cycle and apoptosis, which indicates that
p53
alteration is a key event in esophagus carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:High frequency in esophageal cancers of p53 alterations inactivating the regulation of genes involved in cell cycle and apoptosis. 1075 86
Regulation of cellular processes that eventually lead to a state of growth arrest is an important manifestation of in vitro cellular senescence caused and accompanied by variations of the gene expression pattern. Whereas these changes at the mRNA level have been studied mainly in fibroblast cultures, we concentrated on endothelial cells that represent an accepted model for vascular systems and may be involved in the pathogenesis of diseases related to aging. To isolate differentially expressed genes, we created a subtractive cDNA library using mRNA from senescent (35 passages) and young (five passages) human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs). Candidate clones were isolated from the cDNA library, differential expression was confirmed by Northern blot analyses and sequences were compared with a genbank data base. Because many mRNAs were below the detection limit of Northern blot analysis, we were forced to establish a more sensitive PCR based method (ATAC-PCR) to quantify and confirm altered levels of gene expression. Several mRNAs were found to be upregulated in senescent HUVECs including two components of the extracellular matrix (ECM): plasminogen activator inhibitor and fibronectin. Elevated expression of both has already been described in senescent cells. The mRNAs of TGF-beta-inducible gene H3 (beta-IG-H3; ECM protein), insulin-like growth factor binding protein (IGFBP-3),
p53
-inducible gene (
PIG3
) a protein involved in vesicular transport (SEC13R) and ribosomal protein L28 have likewise been shown to be preferentially expressed in senescent cells. Because studies support the involvement of ECM components, TGF-beta and
p53
in tumor suppressing mechanisms, our data supports the hypothesis that cellular senescence and upregulation of ECM proteins may be associated with tumor preventive functions.
...
PMID:Subtractive hybridization of mRNA from early passage and senescent endothelial cells. 1076 78
The
p53 tumor suppressor protein
induces apoptosis through a mechanism that may involve the transcriptional activation of cellular genes, including the
PIG3
gene. A
p53 protein
lacking the proline-rich region (p53delta62-91) induces many
p53
-responsive genes but not
PIG3
. In parallel, this mutant induces growth arrest but not apoptosis. We show here that the replacement of the N-terminal (amino acids 1-80) or C-terminal (amino acids 344-393) domains of
p53
with heterologous domains does not interfere with transcription from the
PIG3
promoter, but these chimeras still require the proline-rich region for
PIG3
activation. The
p53
-homolog p73beta also activated the
PIG3
promoter, but in contrast to
p53
, the proline-rich domain of p73beta (residues 81-113) was dispensable to induce the
PIG3
promoter. Some tumor-derived
p53
-mutants, especially M246I, retained the ability to activate transcription of mdm2 but specifically failed to induce the
PIG3
promoter, thus resembling p53delta62-91. Further, p53delta62-91 and p53M246I were defective for induction of apoptosis. Finally, p53delta62-91 and p53M246I both showed reduced binding to the DNA of the
PIG3
promoter and also to the DNA of the mdm2 and p21 promoters in vitro. Correspondingly, at low expression levels, p53delta62-91 and p53M246I poorly activated the mdm2 promoter when compared to wild type
p53
. Our results suggest that the proline-rich domain of
p53
affects the ability of the central domain to bind DNA. Moreover, some tumor-derived mutations within the central DNA binding domain of
p53
mimic the loss of the proline-rich domain.
...
PMID:Tumor-derived mutations within the DNA-binding domain of p53 that phenotypically resemble the deletion of the proline-rich domain. 1077 17
To dissect the
p53
-dependent apoptotic pathway, events following induction of temperature sensitive (ts) p53val138 were studied in a Ewing tumor cell line. Transcriptional deregulation of
p53
targets first observable after 1 h at 32 degrees C preceded activation of caspases and the break-down of mitochondrial respiratory activity. Activation of caspases was first observed 4 h after
p53
induction. Using peptide inhibitors we identified activation of caspase 8 upstream of caspases-9 and -3. Although the caspase 8 specific inhibitor z-IETD.fmk did not affect translocation of BAX to the mitochondrial membrane and cytochrome C release it almost completely blocked cleavage of the prototype caspase substrate PARP and DNA fragmentation while enforcing mitochondrial depolarization and production of reactive oxygene species (ROS). Activation of caspase 8 did not involve death-domain receptor signaling. Expression of BCL2 only partially suppressed caspase activation but blocked apoptosis. Replacement of the N-terminus of p53val138 by the related VP16 transactivation domain created a ts
p53
with a tanscriptional activity indistinguishable from p53val138 until the time of caspase activation. However, the VP16 -
p53
fusion failed to trigger caspases and subsequent induction of the ROS producing gene pig3 paralleled by complete loss of apoptotic activity. These results indicate that
p53
-dependent transcriptional deregulation, triggering of the caspase cascade and the mitochondrial break-down occur in a timely ordered sequence coordinated by the genuine
p53
amino terminus and suggest caspase 8 and
PIG3
as key regulatory elements in this process. Oncogene (2000) 19, 4096 - 4107
...
PMID:Characterization of distinct consecutive phases in non-genotoxic p53-induced apoptosis of Ewing tumor cells and the rate-limiting role of caspase 8. 1096 70
Downstream target genes of
p53
are thought to mediate its tumor-suppressive activity, but it is unknown whether differential transactivation of these genes is regulated at the level of
p53
binding to their promoters. To address this issue,
p53
binding in vivo to consensus sites in the p21(Waf1), MDM2, and
PIG3
promoters was investigated in cells exposed to adriamycin (ADR) or ionizing radiation as well as in an inducible
p53
cell line.
p53
-DNA complexes were cross-linked in vivo by treating the cells with formaldehyde and processed by chromatin immunoprecipitation-PCR. This methodology allowed for the analysis of relevant
p53
-DNA complexes by preventing redistribution of cellular components upon collection of cell extracts. Increased
p53
binding to the p21(Waf1), MDM2, and
PIG3
promoters occurred within 2 h after
p53
activation; however, significant increases in
PIG3
transcription did not occur until 15 h after
p53
binding. Gel shift analyses indicated that
p53
had lower affinity for the consensus binding site in the
PIG3
promoters compared to its consensus sites in the p21 and MDM2 genes, which suggests that additional factors may be required to stabilize the interaction of
p53
with the
PIG3
promoter. Further, acetylated
p53
(Lys382) was found in chemically cross-linked complexes at all promoter sites examined after treatment of cells with ADR. In summary, the kinetics of
p53
binding in vivo to target gene regulatory regions does not uniformly correlate with target gene mRNA expression for the p53 target genes examined. Our results suggest that target genes with low-affinity
p53
binding sites may require additional events and will have delayed kinetics of induction compared to those with high-affinity binding sites.
...
PMID:Kinetics of p53 binding to promoter sites in vivo. 1131 63
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