The p53 mRNA-Mdm2 interaction controls mdm2 nuclear trafficking and is required for p53 activation following dna damage
Article
-
- Overview
-
- Research
-
- Identity
-
- Additional Document Info
-
- View All
-
Overview
abstract
-
The ATM kinase and p53 are key tumor suppressor factors that control the genotoxic stress response pathway. The ATM substrate Mdm2 controls p53 activity by either targeting p53 for degradation or promoting its synthesis by binding the p53 mRNA. The physiological role and regulation of Mdm2%27s dual function toward p53 is not known. Here we show that ATM-dependent phosphorylation of Mdm2 at Ser395 is required for the p53 mRNA-Mdm2 interaction. This event also promotes SUMO-conjugation of Mdm2 and its nucleoli accumulation. Interfering with the p53 mRNA-Mdm2 interaction prevents p53 stabilization and activation following DNA damage. These results demonstrate how ATM activity switches Mdm2 from a negative to a positive regulator of p53 via the p53 mRNA. © 2012 Elsevier Inc.
-
The ATM kinase and p53 are key tumor suppressor factors that control the genotoxic stress response pathway. The ATM substrate Mdm2 controls p53 activity by either targeting p53 for degradation or promoting its synthesis by binding the p53 mRNA. The physiological role and regulation of Mdm2's dual function toward p53 is not known. Here we show that ATM-dependent phosphorylation of Mdm2 at Ser395 is required for the p53 mRNA-Mdm2 interaction. This event also promotes SUMO-conjugation of Mdm2 and its nucleoli accumulation. Interfering with the p53 mRNA-Mdm2 interaction prevents p53 stabilization and activation following DNA damage. These results demonstrate how ATM activity switches Mdm2 from a negative to a positive regulator of p53 via the p53 mRNA. © 2012 Elsevier Inc.
publication date
funding provided via
published in
Research
keywords
-
ATM protein; doxorubicin; etoposide; messenger RNA; protein MDM2; protein p53; small interfering RNA; SUMO 1 protein; SUMO 2 protein; apoptosis; article; cell migration; controlled study; DNA damage; flow cytometry; gene silencing; genotoxicity; human; human cell; human tissue; immunoprecipitation; priority journal; protein binding; protein degradation; protein phosphorylation; protein protein interaction; sarcoma cell; signal transduction; sumoylation; ubiquitination; Active Transport, Cell Nucleus; Cell Line, Tumor; DNA Damage; Gene Expression Regulation; Humans; Phosphorylation; Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-mdm2; RNA, Messenger; Tumor Suppressor Protein p53
Identity
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
PubMed ID
Additional Document Info
start page
end page
volume
issue