Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (p53)
77,613 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Wild-type (wt) p53 is a tumor-suppressor protein which acts via transcriptional and transcriptional-independent mechanisms. The transcriptional function of p53 is mediated by specific responsive elements (REs). The MDM2, WAF1/Cip1 and Bax genes possess p53REs and their activation by wt p53 induces cell cycle progression, arrest and programmed cell death (apoptosis), respectively. Mutations of the p53 gene are detected in more than 50% of the human malignant tumors. p53 mutants seem to have a more stable conformation and are suggested to exert dominant-negative inhibition of wt p53 in cells containing both wt and mutant (mt) alleles. However, recent studies show that certain mt p53 proteins posses a "gain of function" phenotype. In the present study, we examined the effects of the second most frequent p53 mutant R273H on the p53REs of the MDM2, WAF1/Cip1 and Bax genes in the H1299 non-small cell lung carcinoma cell line. Although mt p53 R273H alone was unable to bind and transactivate the corresponding p53REs, it enhanced the MDM2-p53RE mediated gene transcription of wt p53 (positive-dominant effect) and prevented the wt p53 transactivation of the p53REs of WAF1/Cip1 and Bax genes (negative-dominant effect). Our data suggest that in the appropriate environment, differential transcription of critical p53 target genes by certain p53 mutant proteins may illustrate another mechanism implicated in tumor development.
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PMID:Modulation of wild-type p53 activity by mutant p53 R273H depends on the p53 responsive element (p53RE). A comparative study between the p53REs of the MDM2, WAFI/Cip1 and Bax genes in the lung cancer environment. WAFI/Cip1 = WAF1/Cip1. 1022 2

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.
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PMID:Differential regulation of cellular target genes by p53 devoid of the PXXP motifs with impaired apoptotic activity. 1032 40

The E6 oncoprotein of human papillomaviruses (HPVs) has the potential to functionally antagonize p53. In several experimental model systems, ectopic expression of E6 can block the genotoxic induction of the growth inhibitory p53 target gene gadd45, suggesting that the inactivation of this pathway may play a major role for HPV-associated cell transformation. Here, we investigated whether this reflects the regulation of gadd45 expression in carcinoma-derived HPV-positive cells. We found that the gadd45 gene is efficiently induced by mitomycin C, cisplatin, and UV irradiation in a series of HPV-positive cervical cancer cell lines. Moreover, clear induction of gadd45 gene expression was also observed following treatment with gamma-irradiation, a pathway that is strictly dependent on functional p53. This contrasted with findings in human foreskin keratinocytes experimentally immortalized by expressing the HPV16 E6, E7, or E6/E7 oncogenes from the heterologous CMV promoter, where expression of the E6 gene was linked to a lack of gadd45 induction following gamma-irradiation. These results indicate (1) that the tumorigenic phenotype of HPV-positive cancer cells is not linked to an inability to induce the gadd45 gene following DNA damage, (2) that experimental model systems in which the E6 gene is expressed ectopically and/or in a different cellular context do not necessarily reflect the regulation of p53-associated pathways in HPV-positive cancer cells and (3) that a pathway strictly depending on functional p53 is inducible in HPV-positive cancer cells, providing direct evidence that the endogenous p53 protein in these cells is competent to activate a cellular target gene, despite coexpression of the viral E6 oncogene.
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PMID:Induction of the p53-target gene GADD45 in HPV-positive cancer cells. 1032 59

p51/p63 is a novel p53 homologue that has been shown to act as a transcriptional activator through the p53-binding sequence of the p21/WAF1 promoter and to induce apoptosis when it is expressed transiently in a human tumor cell line. We developed transcription assay systems for these two related genes in both Saccharomyces cerevisiae and mammalian cells and used them to investigate the functional similarities and differences of these genes. We found that p51/p63 trans-activated the previously identified p53 target genes, but the degree of the transactivation by p51/p63 differed from that by p53. These results suggest that the cellular signal on p51/p63 cross-talks partially but not completely with that of the p53 pathway.
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PMID:The transcriptional activities of p53 and its homologue p51/p63: similarities and differences. 1038 30

Both DR4 and DR5 have recently been identified as membrane death receptors that are activated by their ligand TRAIL to engage the intracellular apoptotic machinery. TRID (also named as TRAIL-R3) is an antagonist decoy receptor and lacks the cytoplasmic death domain. TRID protects from TRAIL-induced apoptosis by competing with DR4 and DR5 for binding to TRAIL. TRID has been shown to be overexpressed in normal human tissues but not in malignantly transformed cell lines. DR5 is a p53-regulated gene and we have recently reported that DR5 expression is induced in response to genotoxic stress in both a p53-dependent and independent manner (Sheikh et al., 1998). In the current study, we demonstrate that TRID gene expression is also induced by the genotoxic agents ionizing radiation and methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) in predominantly p53 wild-type cells, whereas UV-irradiation does not induce TRID gene expression. Consistent with these results, exogenous wild-type p53 also upregulates the expression of endogenous TRID in p53-null cells. Thus, TRID appears to be a p53 target gene that is regulated by genotoxic stress in a p53-dependent manner. Using primary gastrointestinal tract (GIT) tumors and their matching normal tissue, we also demonstrate for the first time that TRID expression is enhanced in primary tumors of the GIT. It is, therefore, possible that TRID overexpressing GIT tumors may gain a selective growth advantage by escaping from TRAIL-induced apoptosis.
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PMID:The antiapoptotic decoy receptor TRID/TRAIL-R3 is a p53-regulated DNA damage-inducible gene that is overexpressed in primary tumors of the gastrointestinal tract. 1043 97

p53 mutants in tumours have a reduced affinity for DNA and a reduced ability to induce apoptosis. We describe a mutant with the opposite phenotype, an increased affinity for some p53-binding sites and an increased ability to induce apoptosis. The apoptotic function requires transcription activation by p53. The mutant has an altered sequence specificity and selectively fails to activate MDM2 transcription. Loss of MDM2 feedback results in overexpression of the mutant, but the mutant kills better than wild-type p53 even in MDM2-null cells. Thus the apoptotic phenotype is due to a combination of decreased MDM2 feedback control and increased or unbalanced expression of other apoptosis-inducing p53 target genes. To identify these genes, DNA chips were screened using RNA from cells expressing the apoptosis-inducing mutant, 121F, and a sequence-specificity mutant with the reciprocal phenotype, 277R. Two potential new mediators of p53-dependent apoptosis were identified, Rad and PIR121, which are induced better by 121F than wild-type p53 and not induced by 277R. The 121F mutant kills untransformed MDM2-null but not wild-type mouse embryo fibroblasts and kills tumour cells irrespective of p53 status. It may thus expand the range of tumours which can be treated by p53 gene therapy.
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PMID:Increased apoptosis induction by 121F mutant p53. 1044 8

Mitochondria have recently been shown to serve a central role in programmed cell death. In addition, reactive oxygen species (ROS) have been implicated in cell death pathways upon treatment with a variety of agents; however, the specific cellular source of the ROS generation is unknown. We hypothesize that mitochondria-derived free radicals play a critical role in apoptotic cell death. To directly test this hypothesis, we treated murine fibrosarcoma cell lines, which expressed a range of mitochondrial manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) activities, with respiratory chain inhibitors. Apoptosis was confirmed by DNA fragmentation analysis and electron microscopy. MnSOD overexpression specifically protected against cell death upon treatment with rotenone or antimycin. We examined bcl-x(L), p53 and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) to identify specific cellular pathways that might contribute to the mitochondrial-initiated ROS-mediated cell death. Cells overexpressing MnSOD contained less bcl-x(L) within the mitochondria compared to control (NEO) cells, therefore excluding the role of bcl-x(L). p53 was undetectable by Western analysis and examination of the proapoptotic protein bax, a p53 target gene, did not increase with treatment. Activation of caspase-3 (CPP-32) occurred in the NEO cells independent of cytochrome c release from the mitochondria. PARP, a target protein of CPP-32 activity, was cleaved to a 64 kDa fragment in the NEO cells prior to generation of nucleosomal fragments. Taken together, these findings suggest that mitochondrial-mediated ROS generation is a key event by which inhibition of respiration causes cell death, and identifies CPP-32 and the PARP-linked pathway as targets of mitochondrial-derived ROS-induced cell death.
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PMID:Overexpression of manganese superoxide dismutase protects against mitochondrial-initiated poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-mediated cell death. 1046 52

Alteration of the p53 tumor suppressor gene is the most common genetic defect known to occur in human tumors. Germ-line p53 mutations significantly increase the risk of developing diverse malignancies. FASAY is a simple functional assay for germ-line and somatic mutations in the p53 gene altering the transactivation capability of the p53 protein. The method was successfully used for mutation analysis of p53 in various cell lines, somatic tumor cells and blood cells. In addition, FASAY was also found effective as a tool for basic research of binding of mutant p53 proteins to promoters of different p53 target genes.
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PMID:FASAY: a simple functional assay in yeast for identification of p53 mutation in tumors. 1046 30

Oncogene activation increases susceptibility to apoptosis. Thus, tumorigenesis must depend, in part, on compensating mutations that protect from programmed cell death. A functional screen for cDNAs that could counteract the proapoptotic effects of the myc oncogene identified two related bHLH family members, Twist and Dermo1. Both of these proteins inhibited oncogene- and p53-dependent cell death. Twist expression bypassed p53-induced growth arrest. These effects correlated with an ability of Twist to interfere with activation of a p53-dependent reporter and to impair induction of p53 target genes in response to DNA damage. An underlying explanation for this observation may be provided by the ability of Twist to reduce expression of the ARF tumor suppressor. Thus, Twist may affect p53 indirectly through modulation of the ARF/MDM2/p53 pathway. Consistent with a role as a potential oncoprotein, Twist expression promoted colony formation of E1A/ras-transformed mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs) in soft agar. Furthermore, Twist was inappropriately expressed in 50% of rhabdomyosarcomas, a tumor that arises from skeletal muscle precursors that fail to differentiate. Twist is known to block myogenic differentiation. Thus, Twist may play multiple roles in the formation of rhabdomyosarcomas, halting terminal differentiation, inhibiting apoptosis, and interfering with the p53 tumor-suppressor pathway.
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PMID:Twist is a potential oncogene that inhibits apoptosis. 1048 44

Ref-1 is a multifunctional protein that stimulates DNA binding by a number of transcription factors and serves as the abasic (A/P) endonuclease in base excision repair. Ref-1 was discovered to be a potent activator of p53 DNA binding in vitro. To address the physiological significance of the effects of Ref-1 on p53, we have analyzed its role in regulating p53 function in vivo. We found that Ref-1 over-expression enhances the ability of p53 to transactivate a number of p53 target promoters and increases the ability of p53 to stimulate endogenous p21 and cyclin G expression. Additionally, it was observed that Ref-1 associates with p53 in vivo and in vitro. Importantly, downregulation of Ref-1 (by antisense) causes a marked reduction in p53 induction of p21 mRNA and protein, as well as diminished ability of p53 to transactivate the p21 and Bax promoters. Moreover, Ref-1 levels are correlated with the extent of apoptosis induced by p53. Finally, we observed that Ref-1 cooperates with a DNA-damaging compound, camptothecin, to stimulate the transcriptional activity of p53. Together these data indicate that Ref-1 is a key cellular regulator of p53.
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PMID:Ref-1 regulates the transactivation and pro-apoptotic functions of p53 in vivo. 1052 5


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