4.8 Article

Dual effect of p53 on radiation sensitivity in vivo:: p53 promotes hematopoietic injury, but protects from gastro-intestinal syndrome in mice

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 23, Issue 19, Pages 3265-3271

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.onc.1207494

Keywords

p53; radiation; hematopoietic syndrome; gastro-intestinal syndrome; apoptosis; growth arrest

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [CA75179] Funding Source: Medline

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Ionizing radiation (IR) induces p53-dependent apoptosis in radiosensitive tissues, suggesting that p53 is a determinant of radiation syndromes. In fact, p53-deficient mice survive doses of IR that cause lethal hematopoietic syndrome in wild-type animals. Surprisingly, p53 deficiency results in sensitization of mice to higher doses of IR, causing lethal gastro-intestinal (GI) syndrome. While cells in the crypts of p53-wild-type epithelium undergo prolonged growth arrest after irradiation, continuous cell proliferation ongoing in p53-deficient epithelium correlates with accelerated death of damaged cells followed by rapid destruction of villi and accelerated lethality. p21-deficient mice are also characterized by increased sensitivity to GI syndrome-inducing doses of IR. We conclude that p53/p21-mediated growth arrest plays a protective role in the epithelium of small intestine after severe doses of IR. Pharmacological inhibition of p53 by a small molecule that can rescue from lethal hematopoietic syndrome has no effect on the lethality from gastro-intestinal syndrome, presumably because of a temporary and reversible nature of its action.

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