Targeting "oncogene addiction" is a promising strategy for anticancer therapy. We report a potent inhibition of crucial oncogenes by p53 upon reactivation by small-molecule RITA in vitro and in vivo. RITA-activated p53 unleashes the transcriptional repression of antiapoptotic proteins Mcl-1, Bcl-2, MAP4, and survivin; blocks the Akt pathway on several levels; and downregulates c-Myc, cyclin E, and beta-catenin. p53 ablates c-Myc expression via several mechanisms at the transcriptional and posttranscriptional level. We show that the threshold for p53-mediated transrepression of survival genes is higher than for transactivation of proapoptotic targets. Inhibition of oncogenes by p53 reduces the cell's ability to buffer proapoptotic signals and elicits robust apoptosis. Our study highlights the role of transcriptional repression for p53-mediated tumor suppression.
Background: High dependence of cancer cells on glycolysis is a good target for cancer therapy. Results: Tumor suppressor p53 represses the expression of key regulators of metabolic genes HIF1a and c-Myc and glucose transporters GLUT1 and GLUT12. Conclusion: Blocking ATP production network by pharmacologically activated p53 contributes to cancer cell death. Significance: Tumor-selective killing by reconstituted p53 might be in part due to inhibition of glycolysis.
Recent evidence adds support to a traditional concept according to which the eukaryotic nucleus is organized into functional domains by scaffold or matrix attachment regions (S/MARs). These regions have previously been predicted to have a high potential for stress-induced duplex destabilization (SIDD). Here we report the parallel results of binding (reassociation) and computational SIDD analyses for regions within the human interferon gene cluster on the short arm of chromosome 9 (9p22). To verify and further refine the biomathematical methods, we focus on a 10 kb region in the cluster with the pseudogene IFNWP18 and the interferon R genes IFNA10 and IFNA7. In a series of S/MAR binding assays, we investigate the promoter and termination regions and additional attachment sequences that were detected in the SIDD profile. The promoters of the IFNA10 and the IFNA7 genes have a moderate ∼20% binding affinity to the nuclear matrix; the termination sequences show stronger association (70-80%) under our standardized conditions. No comparable destabilized elements were detected flanking the IFNWP18 pseudogene, suggesting that selective pressure acts on the physicochemical properties detected here. In extended, noncoding regions a striking periodicity is found of rather restricted SIDD minima with scaffold binding potential. By various criteria, the underlying sequences represent a new class of S/MARs, thought to be involved in a higher level organization of the genome. Together, these data emphasize the relevance of SIDD calculations as a valid approach for the localization of structural, regulatory, and coding regions in the eukaryotic genome.
High-throughput technologies now afford the opportunity to directly determine the distribution of MARs (matrix attachment regions) throughout a genome. The utility of cosmid and oligonucleotide platforms to identify human chromosome 16 MARs from preparations that employed LIS (lithium di-iodosalicylic acid) and NaCl extraction protocols was examined. The effectiveness of the platforms was then evaluated by Q-PCR (quantitative real-time PCR). Analysis revealed that caution must be exercised, since the representation of non-coding regions varies among platforms. Nevertheless, several interesting trends were revealed. We expect that these technologies will prove useful in systems approaches directed towards defining the role of MARs in various cell types and cellular processes.
Evidence is presented for the involvement of the interplay between transcription factor Yin Yang 1 (YY1) and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) in the regulation of mouse PARP-1 gene (muPARP-1) promoter activity. We identified potential YY1 binding motifs (BM) at seven positions in the muPARP-1 core-promoter (−574/+200). Binding of YY1 was observed by the electrophoretic supershift assay using anti-YY1 antibody and linearized or supercoiled forms of plasmids bearing the core promoter, as well as with 30 bp oligonucleotide probes containing the individual YY1 binding motifs and four muPARP-1 promoter fragments. We detected YY1 binding to BM1 (−587/−558), BM4 (−348/−319) and a very prominent association with BM7 (+86/+115). Inspection of BM7 reveals overlap of the muPARP-1 translation start site with the Kozak sequence and YY1 and PARP-1 recognition sites. Site-directed mutagenesis of the YY1 and PARP-1 core motifs eliminated protein binding and showed that YY1 mediates PARP-1 binding next to the Kozak sequence. Transfection experiments with a reporter gene under the control of the muPARP-1 promoter revealed that YY1 binding to BM1 and BM4 independently repressed the promoter. Mutations at these sites prevented YY1 binding, allowing for increased reporter gene activity. In PARP-1 knockout cells subjected to PARP-1 overexpression, effects similar to YY1 became apparent; over expression of YY1 and PARP-1 revealed their synergistic action. Together with our previous findings these results expand the PARP-1 autoregulatory loop principle by YY1 actions, implying rigid limitation of muPARP-1 expression. The joint actions of PARP-1 and YY1 emerge as important contributions to cell homeostasis.
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