4.6 Article

Oncogenes induce and activate endogenous p73 protein

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 276, Issue 14, Pages 11310-11316

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M005737200

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The identification of upstream pathways that signal to TP73 is crucial for understanding the biological role of this gene. Since some evidence suggests that TP73 might play a role in tumorigenesis, we asked whether oncogenes can induce and activate endogenous TP73. Here, we show that endogenous p73 alpha and beta proteins are up-regulated in p53-deficient tumor cells in response to overexpressed E2F1, c-Myc, and Elk E2F1, c-Myc, and E1A-mediated p73 up-regulation leads to activation of the p73 transcription function, as shown by p73-responsive reporter activity and by induction of known endogenous p73 target gene products such as p21 and HDM2. Importantly, E2F1-, c-Myc-, and E1A-mediated activation of endogenous p73 induces apoptosis in SaOs-2 cells. Conversely, inactivation of p73 by a dominant negative p73 inhibitor (p73DD), but not by a mutant p73DD, inhibits oncogene-induced apoptosis. These data show that oncogenes can signal to TP73 in vivo. Moreover, in the absence of p53, oncogenes may enlist p73 to induce apoptosis in tumor cells.

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