4.6 Article

p16(INK4A) enhances the transcriptional and the apoptotic functions of p53 through DNA-dependent interaction

Journal

MOLECULAR CARCINOGENESIS
Volume 56, Issue 7, Pages 1687-1702

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mc.22627

Keywords

aging; apoptosis; heterocomplex; p16INK4A; p53

Funding

  1. United States National Institutes of Health Grant [CA78282]
  2. Tobacco-Restitution Fund of the University of Maryland Greenebaum Cancer Center

Ask authors/readers for more resources

p16(INK4A) and p53 are two important tumor suppressor proteins that play essential roles during cell proliferation and aging through regulating the expression of several genes. Here, we report that p16(INK4A) and p53 co-regulate a plethora of transcripts. Furthermore, both proteins colocalize in the nucleus of human primary skin fibroblasts and breast luminal cells, and form a heteromer whose level increases in response to genotoxic stress as well as aging of human fibroblasts and various mouse organs. CDK4 is also present in this heteromeric complex, which is formed only in the presence ofDNAboth in vitro using pure recombinant proteins and in vivo. We have also shown that p16(INK4A) enhances the binding efficiency of p53 to its cognate sequence presents in the CDKN1A promoter in vitro, and both proteins are present at the promoters of CDKN1A and BAX in vivo. Importantly, the fourth ankyrin repeat of p16(INK4A) and the C-terminal domain of p53 were necessary for the physical association between these two proteins. The physiologic importance of this association was revealed by the inability of cancer-associated p16(INK4A) mutants to interact with p53 and to transactivate the expression of its major targets CDKN1A and BAX in the p16-defective U2OS cells expressing either wild-type or mutated p16(INK4A). Furthermore, the association between p16(INK4A) and p53 was capital for their nuclear colocalization, the X-ray-dependent induction of p21 and Bax proteins as well as the induction of apoptosis in various types of cells. Together, these results show DNA-dependent physical interaction between p16(INK4A) and p53.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available