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      Post-translational regulation of p53 function through 20S proteasome-mediated cleavage

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="d3754675e243">The tumor suppressor p53 is a transcription factor that regulates the expression of a range of target genes in response to cellular stress. Adding to the complexity of understanding its cellular function is that in addition to the full-length protein, several p53 isoforms are produced in humans, harboring diverse expression patterns and functionalities. One isoform, Δ40p53, which lacks the first transactivation domain including the binding region for the negative regulator MDM2, was shown to be a product of alternative translation initiation. Here we report the discovery of an alternative cellular mechanism for Δ40p53 formation. We show that the 20S proteasome specifically cleaves the full-length protein (FLp53) to generate the Δ40p53 isoform. Moreover, we demonstrate that a dimer of FLp53 interacts with a Δ40p53 dimer, creating a functional hetero-tetramer. Consequently, the co-expression of both isoforms attenuates the transcriptional activity of FLp53 in a dominant negative manner. Finally, we demonstrate that following oxidative stress, at the time when the 20S proteasome becomes the major degradation machinery and FLp53 is activated, the formation of Δ40p53 is enhanced, creating a negative feedback loop that balances FLp53 activation. Overall, our results suggest that Δ40p53 can be generated by a 20S proteasome-mediated post-translational mechanism so as to control p53 function. More generally, the discovery of a specific cleavage function for the 20S proteasome may represent a more general cellular regulatory mechanism to produce proteins with distinct functional properties. </p>

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          Most cited references50

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          p53 isoforms can regulate p53 transcriptional activity.

          The recently discovered p53-related genes, p73 and p63, express multiple splice variants and N-terminally truncated forms initiated from an alternative promoter in intron 3. To date, no alternative promoter and multiple splice variants have been described for the p53 gene. In this study, we show that p53 has a gene structure similar to the p73 and p63 genes. The human p53 gene contains an alternative promoter and transcribes multiple splice variants. We show that p53 variants are expressed in normal human tissue in a tissue-dependent manner. We determine that the alternative promoter is conserved through evolution from Drosophila to man, suggesting that the p53 family gene structure plays an essential role in the multiple activities of the p53 family members. Consistent with this hypothesis, p53 variants are differentially expressed in human breast tumors compared with normal breast tissue. We establish that p53beta can bind differentially to promoters and can enhance p53 target gene expression in a promoter-dependent manner, while Delta133p53 is dominant-negative toward full-length p53, inhibiting p53-mediated apoptosis. The differential expression of the p53 isoforms in human tumors may explain the difficulties in linking p53 status to the biological properties and drug sensitivity of human cancer.
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            Transcriptional regulation by p53.

            Inactivation of p53 is critical for the formation of most tumors. Illumination of the key function(s) of p53 protein in protecting cells from becoming cancerous is therefore a worthy goal. Arguably p53's most important function is to act as a transcription factor that directly regulates perhaps several hundred of the cell's RNA polymerase II (RNAP II)-transcribed genes, and indirectly regulates thousands of others. Indeed p53 is the most well studied mammalian transcription factor. The p53 tetramer binds to its response element where it can recruit diverse transcriptional coregulators such as histone modifying enzymes, chromatin remodeling factors, subunits of the mediator complex, and components of general transcription machinery and preinitiation complex (PIC) to modulate RNAPII activity at target loci (Laptenko and Prives 2006). The p53 transcriptional program is regulated in a stimulus-specific fashion (Murray-Zmijewski et al. 2008; Vousden and Prives 2009), whereby distinct subsets of p53 target genes are induced in response to different p53-activating agents, likely allowing cells to tailor their response to different types of stress. How p53 is able to discriminate between these different loci is the subject of intense research. Here, we describe key aspects of the fundamentals of p53-mediated transcriptional regulation and target gene promoter selectivity.
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              Structural biology of the tumor suppressor p53.

              The tumor suppressor protein p53 induces or represses the expression of a variety of target genes involved in cell cycle control, senescence, and apoptosis in response to oncogenic or other cellular stress signals. It exerts its function as guardian of the genome through an intricate interplay of independently folded and intrinsically disordered functional domains. In this review, we provide insights into the structural complexity of p53, the molecular mechanisms of its inactivation in cancer, and therapeutic strategies for the pharmacological rescue of p53 function in tumors. p53 emerges as a paradigm for a more general understanding of the structural organization of modular proteins and the effects of disease-causing mutations.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cell Death and Differentiation
                Cell Death Differ
                Springer Nature
                1350-9047
                1476-5403
                September 08 2017
                September 08 2017
                :
                :
                Article
                10.1038/cdd.2017.139
                5686354
                28885617
                aceab35c-1503-49df-b146-cf43b208b15c
                © 2017
                History

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