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Regulation of the Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p57Kip2 Expression by p63

Pages 1625-1631 | Published online: 22 Aug 2005
 

Abstract

The cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor p57Kip2 is a negative regulator of cell proliferation, binding to a variety of cyclin-CDK complexes and inhibiting their kinase activities. The p57Kip2 gene was recognized as a target gene for p73β, one member of the p53 family. In spite of this, the phenotypes of p73 and p57Kip2 knock out mice do not resemble each other while there is a phenotypic overlap betweeen the p57Kip2 null mice, the p63 null mice and patients affected by p63 associated syndromes, suggesting that p57Kip2 could be indeed a downstream target of p63. By ChIP we determined that in the HaCaT cell line the δNp63α protein is associated to three different regions of the p57Kip2 gene. δNp63 can activate both the endogenous p57Kip2 gene and a reporter vector containing a -2191 promoter fragment of the p57Kip2 gene. Natural p63 mutants, associated to the AEC syndrome, show a partial or complete lack of transactivation potential of the p57Kip2 promoter, while three other natural p63 mutants, associated to the EEC, LMS and SHFM-4 syndromes, were less affected. These data suggests that p63 play an important role in the regulation of p57Kip2 expression and that this regulation is subverted in AEC p63 mutants.

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