AI Article Synopsis

  • In response to genotoxic stress, the TP53 tumor suppressor activates genes that can either halt the cell cycle or trigger apoptosis, while TP63 can repress these effects to promote cell proliferation, especially in squamous cell carcinomas where TP63 is often overexpressed.
  • Using ChIP-sequencing and microarray analysis, the researchers studied how TP53 and TP63 interact at the genome level during genotoxic stress in normal cells, finding that they bind to overlapping but different regions of the genome.
  • The study showed that different chemotherapeutic agents like cisplatin and adriamycin affect TP53 and TP63 binding in distinct ways, influencing the regulation of numerous genes related to cell cycle control, DNA repair, and apoptosis,

Article Abstract

In response to genotoxic stress the TP53 tumour suppressor activates target gene expression to induce cell cycle arrest or apoptosis depending on the extent of DNA damage. These canonical activities can be repressed by TP63 in normal stratifying epithelia to maintain proliferative capacity or drive proliferation of squamous cell carcinomas, where TP63 is frequently overexpressed/amplified. Here we use ChIP-sequencing, integrated with microarray analysis, to define the genome-wide interplay between TP53 and TP63 in response to genotoxic stress in normal cells. We reveal that TP53 and TP63 bind to overlapping, but distinct cistromes of sites through utilization of distinctive consensus motifs and that TP53 is constitutively bound to a number of sites. We demonstrate that cisplatin and adriamycin elicit distinct effects on TP53 and TP63 binding events, through which TP53 can induce or repress transcription of an extensive network of genes by direct binding and/or modulation of TP63 activity. Collectively, this results in a global TP53-dependent repression of cell cycle progression, mitosis and DNA damage repair concomitant with activation of anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic canonical target genes. Further analyses reveal that in the absence of genotoxic stress TP63 plays an important role in maintaining expression of DNA repair genes, loss of which results in defective repair.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4041465PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gku299DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

tp53 tp63
16
genotoxic stress
16
response genotoxic
12
interplay tp53
8
tp63
8
tp63 response
8
cell cycle
8
dna damage
8
tp53
7
genome-wide characterization
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!