4.5 Article

Differential response of p53 target genes to p73 overexpression in SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cell line

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 117, Issue 2, Pages 293-301

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.00834

Keywords

neuroblastoma; p73; p53; apoptosis; differentiation

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p73, the first p53 gene homologue, encodes an array of p73 proteins including p73alpha full-length (TAp73alpha) and amino-truncated isoforms (DeltaNp73alpha), two proteins with opposite biological functions. TAp73alpha, can induce tumor suppressive properties, while DeltaNp73alpha antagonizes p53 as well as TAp73 in a dominant-negative manner. In human malignant neuroblasts, p53 protein is wild-type but known to be excluded from the nucleus, therefore disabling its function as a tumor suppressor. The present study investigates whether there is a functional link between p73 isoforms and p53 in neuroblastoma. Experiments were performed on two neuroblastoma cell lines differing in their p53 status, e.g. wild-type p53 SH-5Y5Y cells and mutated p53 IGR-N-91 cells. Data indicate that (i) both TA- and DeltaN-p73alpha enhance p53 protein level in SH-SY5Y cells, whereas level remains unchanged in IGR-N-91 cells; (ii) only in SH-SY5Y cells does forced TAp73alpha overexpression markedly induce nuclear accumulation of p53 protein; (iii) p21 protein expression is increased in both cell lines infected with TAp73, suggesting that, in IGR-N-91 cells, p21 is induced by p73 through a p53-independent pathway; (iv) in the SH-SY5Y cell line, Btg2 expression is strongly enhanced in cells overexpressing TA, and to a lesser extent in cells overexpressing DeltaN. Taken together our results suggest that TAp73 may restore p53 function in NB with wild-type nonfunctional p53, but not in NB with mutated p53.

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