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Gene Expression

Thymidylate Synthase Protein and p53 mRNA Form an In Vivo Ribonucleoprotein Complex

, , , , , , , , , & show all
Pages 1582-1594 | Received 15 Jun 1998, Accepted 22 Oct 1998, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

A thymidylate synthase (TS)-ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex composed of TS protein and the mRNA of the tumor suppressor gene p53 was isolated from cultured human colon cancer cells. RNA gel shift assays confirmed a specific interaction between TS protein and the protein-coding region of p53 mRNA, and in vitro translation studies demonstrated that this interaction resulted in the specific repression of p53 mRNA translation. To demonstrate the potential biological role of the TS protein-p53 mRNA interaction, Western immunoblot analysis revealed nearly undetectable levels of p53 protein in TS-overexpressing human colon cancer H630-R10 and rat hepatoma H35(F/F) cell lines compared to the levels in their respective parent H630 and H35 cell lines. Polysome analysis revealed that the p53 mRNA was associated with higher-molecular-weight polysomes in H35 cells compared to H35(F/F) cells. While the level of p53 mRNA expression was identical in parent and TS-overexpressing cell lines, the level of p53 RNA bound to TS in the form of RNP complexes was significantly higher in TS-overexpressing cells. The effect of TS on p53 expression was also investigated with human colon cancer RKO cells by use of a tetracycline-inducible system. Treatment of RKO cells with a tetracycline derivative, doxycycline, resulted in 15-fold-induced expression of TS protein and nearly complete suppression of p53 protein expression. However, p53 mRNA levels were identical in transfected RKO cells in the absence and presence of doxycycline. Taken together, these findings suggest that TS regulates the expression of p53 at the translational level. This study identifies a novel pathway for regulating p53 gene expression and expands current understanding of the potential role of TS as a regulator of cellular gene expression.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Kristen Carey for technical assistance; Bruce Chabner, Leslie Parsels, and John Schmitz for helpful discussions and critical reading of the manuscript; and Janet Edds and Edna McCarthy for editorial preparation of the manuscript. We also thank Alan Hinnebusch and Matthew Melton for advice and input regarding the polysome experiments.

This work was supported in part by grants from the National Science Foundation (MCB93-16321 to G.F.M.), the National Cancer Institute (CA44355 to F.M. and CA16359 and CA75712 to E.C.), and the Department of Veteran Affairs (VA Merit Review to E.C.).

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