Lecture 10: p53 Flashcards

1
Q

p53 is the safety-brake of the cell cycle

A

*p53 Defective in numerous Tumours
*Familial cancer syndrome Li Fraumeni syndromesusceptibility to a wide variety of cancers

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2
Q

p53 is a nuclear protein that normally exists in the cell as a

A

homotetramer (ie an assembly of 4 identical polypeptide subunits)

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3
Q

Mutant p53 acts in a

A

dominant negative manner to ‘block’ the activities
of wild type (WT) p53

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4
Q

When have mutant p53 allele and WT p53 allele-

A

-function of p53 in cell
is almost gone-mixture of mutant and wild type p53-if tetramer has a
single mutant p53 subunit-interfere with function of the tetramer as a
whole

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5
Q

Direct DNA binding

A

Most mutations
affecting p53 cause the
p53 protein to lose its transcription
activating powers.
DNA binding is by
p53 tetramers.
DNA binding is central to p53 function

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6
Q

How is p53 expression and activity controlled?

A

1 Gene transcription
Stimuli such as DNA damage or irradiation increase p53
transcription
2 Protein stability
p53 is unstable, & rapidly degraded in normal cell (little p53
protein seen)
In response to DNA damage p53 levels increase in the cell
3 Post translational modification
For full activity, phosphorylation at key serine residues is
required.
4 Location
For full activity, p53 needs to be in the nucleus.
5 Structural interactions/oligomerization
For full activity, p53 needs to form a tetramer-(ie for p53
an assembly of 4 identical polypeptide subunits)

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7
Q
  1. How is p53 expression and activity
    controlled?
    Mdm2 protein can bind to and inactivate p53.
A

Following DNA damage (eg X-rays, UV, chemotherapeutic drugs) levels of
p53 protein increase dramatically in the absence of any marked changes
in mRNA levels of p53-indicates post-translational modification of p53
stabilises p53 protein

  1. p53 protein levels increase (see 8h post-radiation in Western blot
    below) following phosphorylation events mediated by several kinases
    (stabilize p53)(MDM2 not able to bind p-p53).
    These kinases can become activated following DNA damage.
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8
Q

p53 is a transcriptional activator

A

p53 regulates transcription positively
p53 functions as a TF that halts cell cycle advance in
response to DNA damage and attempts to aid in
the repair process

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9
Q

Transcriptional
Activation of=

A

p21 (CDKI)-important target p53
GADD45 (role=involved in repair DNA
damage)
BAX, Bid, APAF1(role=Apoptosis)
Thrombospondin-1 (anti-angiogenesis)
MDM2 (role=p53’s negative
regulator!)

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10
Q

The great majority of the mutations
affecting the p53 gene cause the p53
protein to

A

lose its transcription-activating
powers
* amino acid substitutions in the DNA-binding
domain of p53.

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11
Q

Progression through G1

A

CDK2-E cyclin
inactive
—CDK2-E cyclin
active—RB—Rb-PPP (Hyperphosphorylated pRb)-
Allows for S-phase gene expression
By E2F TFs.

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12
Q

If DNA damage is detected in G1 then p53 will halt cell cycle
progression through transcriptional upregulation of

A

CDKI p21 (ie increase
in p21).DNA repair machinery then activated

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13
Q

DNA replication

A

p21 competes with DNA
polymerase d for PCNA
directly inhibits DNA
replication.
Proliferating Cell Nuclear
Antigen (PCNA) regulates
DNA replication

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14
Q
  • p53 Targets CyclinB-CDK1
A

p53-another target is 14-3-3s protein sequesters
cyclinB-CDK1 complex in the cytoplasm, prevents
it from moving into nucleus-Prevents Mitosis
until DNA repair has been successful
* GADD45 (p53 target) binds to and dissociates
CDK1-cyclinB kinase
* P21 CDKI (v. important p53 target)

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15
Q

P53 and apoptosis

A
  • Extrinsic
    – p53 increases transcription of Fas
    – p53 enhances Fas transport to cell surface
  • Intrinsic
    – p53 induces BAX, PUMA and NOXA (pro-apoptotic proteins)
    – p53 induces APAF-1 (see apoptosome)
    – Inhibits BCL2 and BCL2-XL (direct binding)

p53 is mutated in a high
percentage of cancersLeads to deregulation of apoptosis
pathways and increases tumorigenesis

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16
Q

PRIMA-1 AND PRIMA-1MET (NOW KNOWN AS APR-246)

A

-P53 reactivation and induction of massive apoptosis
-Binds and refolds p53 in to its WT conformation, restoring p53 function
-Mutant p53: A therapeutic target for triple negative
-APR-246 anti-proliferative activity was more potent in p53 mutant vs. p53 WT triple negative breast cancer cells
-APR-246 induced cell death through apoptosis in a mutant p53 dependent manner
-APR-246 inhibites cell migration in p53 mutated cells, which may have implication for metaststic breast cancers
P53 protein levels may be a therapeutic predicitive biomarker for response to APR-246

17
Q

Clinical status for APR-246

A

Completed: Phase 1b study for relapsed platinum sensitive and particlly platinum sensitive high grage serous ovarian (HGSO) cancer