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p53 binding to the p21 promoter is dependent on the nature of DNA damage

Pages 2535-2543 | Published online: 06 Aug 2008
 

Abstract

p53 is a tumor suppressor that integrates signals from different stress induced signalling pathways, regulates cell cycle arrest, senescence, apoptosis, and DNA repair. How p53 dictates cell fate is unclear. As a major transcriptional target of p53 in response to cellular stress, p21 is a key component in cell cycle control and apoptosis, directing an anti-apoptotic response following DNA damage. It is therefore likely that p53-dependent regulation of p21 contributes, at least in part, how p53 influences cellular outcome upon DNA damage. Here we compare the p53-dependent transcriptional regulation of p21 in response to DNA damage by ultraviolet (UV) radiation and ionizing radiation (IR). We demonstrate that despite comparable levels of p53 accumulation by both types of DNA damage, IR causes significant, early accumulation of p21 not seen in UV-damaged cells, with a substantially different cell cycle profile. Whereas UV and IR both target p21 protein for degradation immediately after DNA damage, differential post-damage p21 transcription is accountable for the disparity in p21 protein levels. Chromatin immunoprecipitation studies reveal that p53 displays a clear bias against the p21 promoter in UV-damaged cells compared to IR-damaged cells. We note differential post-translational modifications of nuclear p53 between UV and IR treatment. Furthermore we demonstrate that this disparity correlated with reduced histone acetylation on the TATA box within the p21 promoter following UV treatment. This suggests that the nature of DNA damage enables p53 to selectively discriminate between promoters in the induction of target genes, thereby regulating their expression and subsequent cellular outcome.

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