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The inherent instability of mutant p53 is alleviated by Mdm2 or p16INK4a loss

Authors :
Tomoo Iwakuma
Carolyn S. Van Pelt
Gene A. Lang
Guillermina Lozano
Young Ah Suh
Manja Neumann
Sean M. Post
Tamara Terzian
Source :
Genes & Development. 22:1337-1344
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2008.

Abstract

The p53 tumor suppressor is often disrupted in human cancers by the acquisition of missense mutations. We generated mice with a missense mutation at codon 172 that mimics the p53R175H hot spot mutation in human cancer. p53 homozygous mutant mice have unstable mutant p53 in normal cells and stabilize mutant p53 in some but not all tumors. To investigate the significance of these data, we examined the regulation of mutant p53 stability by Mdm2, an E3 ubiquitin ligase that targets p53 for degradation, and p16INK4a, a member of the Rb tumor suppressor pathway. Mice lacking Mdm2 or p16INK4a stabilized mutant p53, and revealed an earlier age of tumor onset than p53 mutant mice and a gain-of-function metastatic phenotype. Analysis of tumors from p53 homozygous mutant mice with stable p53 revealed defects in the Rb pathway. Additionally, ionizing radiation stabilizes wild-type and mutant p53. Thus, the stabilization of mutant p53 is not a given but it is a prerequisite for its gain-of-function phenotype. Since mutant p53 stability mimics that of wild-type p53, these data indicate that drugs aimed at activating wild-type p53 will also stabilize mutant p53 with dire consequences.

Details

ISSN :
15495477 and 08909369
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genes & Development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2799a0717a2fe3d0fdbb352431ebdf5a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.1662908