Replicative senescence in human fibroblasts is absolutely dependent on the function of the phosphoprotein p53 and correlates with activation of p53-dependent transcription. However, no evidence for posttranslational modification of p53 in senescence has been presented, raising the possibility that changes in transcriptional activity result from upregulation of a coactivator. Using a series of antibodies with phosphorylation-sensitive epitopes, we now show that senescence is associated with major changes at putative regulatory sites in the N and C termini of p53 consistent with increased phosphorylation at serine-15, threonine-18, and serine-376 and decreased phosphorylation at serine-392. Ionizing and UV radiation generated overlapping but distinct profiles of response, with increased serine-15 phosphorylation being the only common change. These results support a direct role for p53 in signaling replicative senescence and are consistent with the generation by telomere erosion of a signal which shares some but not all of the features of DNA double-strand breaks.Normal human somatic cells (with the possible exception of stem cells) are capable of only a finite number of cell divisions, after which they enter a nondividing though viable state termed replicative senescence (22,55). The significance of this phenomenon for human health is two-edged. On the one hand, it imposes a natural obstacle to clonal expansion, which probably plays a vital part in limiting tumor development (2, 38, 59). On the other hand, in some tissues, notably skin and blood vessels, it may account for progressive functional abnormality with advancing age. This may result directly from loss of regenerative capacity but also indirectly through senescence-associated biochemical changes, a good example being the increased collagenase secretion by ageing dermal fibroblasts, which may be significant even when only a minority of cells are overtly senescent (11,34). Knowledge of the underlying mechanisms of cellular senescence is therefore central to both cancer and aging research.We and others have demonstrated that one key signal pathway mediating replicative senescence involves the phosphoprotein p53, more widely recognized for its role as a tumor suppressor, which is known to mediate growth arrest in response to a wide variety of cellular stress signals including DNA damage (31, 40). Experimental abrogation of p53 function prevents fibroblasts from entering senescence normally and indeed can reverse established senescence, demonstrating that p53, if not sufficient, is certainly necessary for this process (5,6,20). Furthermore, growth arrest in senescence is tightly correlated with switching on of the transcriptional transactivation function of p53, as revealed by the use of reporter constructs and by DNA binding assays (1,7,50).Nevertheless, senescence has not thus far been shown to lead to any of the range of posttranslational modifications of the p53 protein which bring about its activation in response to other signals such as DNA damage (19). ...
The tumour suppressor gene p53 plays a major role in the cellular response to DNA damage, mediating growth arrest and/or apoptosis. Phosphorylation of the protein occurs at numerous sites in vivo and is likely to be a major mechanism for modulation of its activity as a transcriptional transactivator. Not surprisingly, therefore, p53 has been intensively studied by 32 P metabolic labelling. Here we show however, using normal human ®broblasts, that typical labelling conditions induce (i) a p53-dependent inhibition of DNA synthesis and (ii) an increase in the cellular content of p53 protein detectable by the phosphorylation-sensitive antibody DO-1 but not by antibody DO-12. These data demonstrate for the ®rst time that 32 P labelling is sucient to induce a biologically-signi®cant, p53-mediated cellular response and strongly suggest that it perturbs the phosphorylation state of p53 which it is being used to measure. This highlights the need to re-evaluate earlier data by nonradioactive approaches using phospho-speci®c antibodies.
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