4.8 Article

MEF/ELF4 transactivation by E2F1 is inhibited by p53

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 39, Issue 1, Pages 76-88

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkq762

Keywords

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Funding

  1. The Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture (MEXT) of Japan [19390045]
  2. (Cell Fate Regulation Research and Education Unit), MEXT, Japan
  3. The Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan

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Myeloid elf-1-like factor (MEF) or Elf4 is an E-twenty-six (ETS)-related transcription factor with strong transcriptional activity that influences cellular senescence by affecting tumor suppressor p53. MEF downregulates p53 expression and inhibits p53-mediated cellular senescence by transcriptionally activating MDM2. However, whether p53 reciprocally opposes MEF remains unexplored. Here, we show that MEF is modulated by p53 in human cells and mice tissues. MEF expression and promoter activity were suppressed by p53. While we found that MEF promoter does not contain p53 response elements, intriguingly, it contains E2F consensus sites. Subsequently, we determined that E2F1 specifically binds to MEF promoter and transactivates MEF. Nevertheless, E2F1 DNA binding and transactivation of MEF promoter was inhibited by p53 through the association between p53 and E2F1. Furthermore, we showed that activation of p53 in doxorubicin-induced senescent cells increased E2F1 and p53 interaction, diminished E2F1 recruitment to MEF promoter and reduced MEF expression. These observations suggest that p53 down-regulates MEF by associating with and inhibiting the binding activity of E2F1, a novel transcriptional activator of MEF. Together with previous findings, our present results indicate that a negative regulatory mechanism exists between p53 and MEF.

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