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P73 functionally replaces p53 in Adriamycin-treated, p53-deficient breast cancer cells

✍ Scribed by Muriel Vayssade; Hedi Haddada; Laetitia Faridoni-Laurens; Sophie Tourpin; Alexandre Valent; Jean Bénard; Jean-Charles Ahomadegbe


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
French
Weight
689 KB
Volume
116
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

p53‐related genes, p73 and p63, encode 2 classes of proteins, TA‐p73/p63 and ΔN‐p73/p63. TA‐p73/p63 demonstrate p53‐like properties including gene transactivation and cell death promotion, whereas ΔN‐p73/p63 lack these p53‐like functions. Although p53‐deficient cancer cells are often less responsive to chemotherapy, they are not completely drug resistant, suggesting that other apoptotic pathways are at work. Here, we compared for the first time to our knowledge p73 and p63 activation in various breast cancer (BC) cell lines after Adriamycin (ADR) treatment, an agent considered as mandatory in breast cancer chemotherapy. Our study was carried out using 1 p53‐proficient BC cell line (MCF7 cells) and 3 BC cell lines deficient in p53 response (MCF7/ADR^IGR^, MDA‐MB157 and T47D) after ADR‐induced genotoxic stress. We report that in cells with no p53 response after ADR treatment, TAp73, but not TAp63 or ΔN‐p73/p63, may replace p53 in triggering not only apoptosis but also cell cycle arrest or DNA repair effectors such as p21, GADD45, 14‐3‐3σ and p53R2. We also demonstrate that TAp73 siRNA inhibits the accumulation of TAp73 in response to ADR treatment in MDA‐MB157 cells and confers protection against ADR. ADR‐induced downregulation of the ΔNp73 isoform in the T47D cell line with nonfunctional mutant p53 further supports anti‐apoptotic function of the isoform antagonistic to both p53 and TA‐p73/p63. Exogenous TAp73 and ΔNp73 overexpression in p53‐response‐deficient cell lines further confirms these results. cDNA microarray techniques demonstrated that the cellular response induced by p73 during ADR treatment could involve specific genes. © 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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P53 mediated regulation of metallothione
✍ Elena A. Ostrakhovitch; Per-Erik Olsson; Jonas von Hofsten; M. George Cherian 📂 Article 📅 2007 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 364 KB

## Abstract Recent studies have shown that only breast cancer epithelial cells with intact p53 can induce metallothionein (MT) synthesis after exposure to metals. In this study, the potential role of p53 on regulation of MT was investigated. Results demonstrate that zinc and copper increased metal