4.6 Article

The Activating Transcription Factor 3 Protein Suppresses the Oncogenic Function of Mutant p53 Proteins

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 13, Pages 8947-8959

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.503755

Keywords

Drug Resistance; Invasion; Lung Cancer; Migration; p53; ATF3; Mutant p53

Funding

  1. NCI, National Institutes of Health [RO1CA139107, RO1CA164006]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81202038]
  3. Scientific Research Foundation for Returned Overseas Chinese Scholars

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Background: Mutant p53 often acquires tumor-promoting activities, including the promotion of cancer cell survival, invasion, and metastasis. Results: Activating transcription factor 3 (ATF3) bound mutant p53 proteins, sensitized cancer cells to chemotherapy, and suppressed mutant p53-mediated cell migration. Conclusion: ATF3 suppressed the tumor-promoting function of mutant p53. Significance: Targeting ATF3 could be a novel strategy for treating p53-mutated cancer. Mutant p53 proteins (mutp53) often acquire oncogenic activities, conferring drug resistance and/or promoting cancer cell migration and invasion. Although it has been well established that such a gain of function is mainly achieved through interaction with transcriptional regulators, thereby modulating cancer-associated gene expression, how the mutp53 function is regulated remains elusive. Here we report that activating transcription factor 3 (ATF3) bound common mutp53 (e.g. R175H and R273H) and, subsequently, suppressed their oncogenic activities. ATF3 repressed mutp53-induced NFKB2 expression and sensitized R175H-expressing cancer cells to cisplatin and etoposide treatments. Moreover, ATF3 appeared to suppress R175H- and R273H-mediated cancer cell migration and invasion as a consequence of preventing the transcription factor p63 from inactivation by mutp53. Accordingly, ATF3 promoted the expression of the metastasis suppressor SHARP1 in mutp53-expressing cells. An ATF3 mutant devoid of the mutp53-binding domain failed to disrupt the mutp53-p63 binding and, thus, lost the activity to suppress mutp53-mediated migration, suggesting that ATF3 binds to mutp53 to suppress its oncogenic function. In line with these results, we found that down-regulation of ATF3 expression correlated with lymph node metastasis in TP53-mutated human lung cancer. We conclude that ATF3 can suppress mutp53 oncogenic function, thereby contributing to tumor suppression in TP53-mutated cancer.

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