p53-dependent apoptosis in the absence of transcriptional activation of p53-target genes
- PMID: 8028670
- DOI: 10.1038/370220a0
p53-dependent apoptosis in the absence of transcriptional activation of p53-target genes
Abstract
The tumour suppressor p53 is required to induce programmed cell death (apoptosis) by DNA-damaging agents. As p53 is a transcriptional activator that mediates gene induction after DNA damage, it has been proposed to be a genetic switch that activates apoptosis-mediator genes. Here we evaluate the role of p53 in DNA-damage-induced apoptosis by establishing derivatives of GHFT1 cells, that are somatotropic progenitors immortalized by expression of SV40 T-antigen, which express a temperature-sensitive p53 mutant. In these cells induction of apoptosis by DNA damage depends strictly on p53 function. A shift to the permissive temperature triggers apoptosis following DNA damage, but this is independent of new RNA or protein synthesis. The extent of apoptotic DNA cleavage is directly proportional to the period during which p53 is functional. These results do not support the proposal that p53 is an activator of apoptosis-mediator genes but rather indicate that p53 either represses genes necessary for cell survival or is a component of the enzymatic machinery for apoptotic cleavage or repair of DNA.
Comment in
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Tumour-suppressor genes. X-rays strike p53 again.Nature. 1994 Jul 21;370(6486):174-5. doi: 10.1038/370174a0. Nature. 1994. PMID: 8028656 No abstract available.
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