4.6 Article

Interplay between Ribosomal Protein S27a and MDM2 Protein in p53 Activation in Response to Ribosomal Stress

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 286, Issue 26, Pages 22730-22741

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M111.223651

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R00CA127134]
  2. Department of Defense [W81XWH-10-1-1029]
  3. Medical Research Foundation of Oregon
  4. Oregon Health and Science University
  5. OHSU Knight Cancer Institute

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Ribosomal proteins play a critical role in tightly coordinating p53 signaling with ribosomal biogenesis. Several ribosomal proteins have been shown to induce and activate p53 via inhibition of MDM2. Here, we report that S27a, a small subunit ribosomal protein synthesized as an 80-amino acid ubiquitin C-terminal extension protein (CEP80), functions as a novel regulator of the MDM2-p53 loop. S27a interacts with MDM2 at the central acidic domain of MDM2 and suppresses MDM2-mediated p53 ubiquitination, leading to p53 activation and cell cycle arrest. Knockdown of S27a significantly attenuates the p53 activation in cells in response to treatment with ribosomal stress-inducing agent actinomycin D or 5-fluorouracil. Interestingly, MDM2 in turn ubiquitinates S27a and promotes proteasomal degradation of S27a in response to actinomycin D treatment, thus forming a mutual-regulatory loop. Altogether, our results reveal that S27a plays a non-redundant role in mediating p53 activation in response to ribosomal stress via interplaying with MDM2.

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