4.7 Article

53BP1 and USP28 mediate p53 activation and G1 arrest after centrosome loss or extended mitotic duration

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 214, Issue 2, Pages 155-166

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.201604081

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health grant [GM074207]
  2. Hilton Ludwig Cancer Prevention Initiative
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [ME 4713/1-1]
  4. Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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In normal human cells, centrosome loss induced by centrinone-a specific centrosome duplication inhibitor-leads to irreversible, p53-dependent G1 arrest by an unknown mechanism. A genome-wide CRI SPR/Cas9 screen for centrinone resistance identified genes encoding the p53-binding protein 53BP1, the deubiquitinase USP28, and the ubiquitin ligase TRIM37. Deletion of TP53BP1, USP28, or TRIM37 prevented p53 elevation in response to centrosome loss but did not affect cytokinesis failure-induced arrest or p53 elevation after doxorubicin-induced DNA damage. Deletion of TP53BP1 and USP28, but not TRIM37, prevented growth arrest in response to prolonged mitotic duration. TRIM37 knockout cells formed ectopic centrosomal-component foci that suppressed mitotic defects associated with centrosome loss. TP53BP1 and USP28 knockouts exhibited compromised proliferation after centrosome removal, suggesting that centrosome-independent proliferation is not conferred solely by the inability to sense centrosome loss. Thus, analysis of centrinone resistance identified a 53BP1-USP28 module as critical for communicating mitotic challenges to the p53 circuit and TRIM37 as an enforcer of the singularity of centrosome assembly.

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