[HTML][HTML] Tumor suppression in the absence of p53-mediated cell-cycle arrest, apoptosis, and senescence

T Li, N Kon, L Jiang, M Tan, T Ludwig, Y Zhao, R Baer… - Cell, 2012 - cell.com
T Li, N Kon, L Jiang, M Tan, T Ludwig, Y Zhao, R Baer, W Gu
Cell, 2012cell.com
Cell-cycle arrest, apoptosis, and senescence are widely accepted as the major mechanisms
by which p53 inhibits tumor formation. Nevertheless, it remains unclear whether they are the
rate-limiting steps in tumor suppression. Here, we have generated mice bearing lysine to
arginine mutations at one (p53 K117R) or three (p53 3KR; K117R+ K161R+ K162R) of p53
acetylation sites. Although p53 K117R/K117R cells are competent for p53-mediated cell-
cycle arrest and senescence, but not apoptosis, all three of these processes are ablated in …
Summary
Cell-cycle arrest, apoptosis, and senescence are widely accepted as the major mechanisms by which p53 inhibits tumor formation. Nevertheless, it remains unclear whether they are the rate-limiting steps in tumor suppression. Here, we have generated mice bearing lysine to arginine mutations at one (p53K117R) or three (p533KR; K117R+K161R+K162R) of p53 acetylation sites. Although p53K117R/K117R cells are competent for p53-mediated cell-cycle arrest and senescence, but not apoptosis, all three of these processes are ablated in p533KR/3KR cells. Surprisingly, unlike p53 null mice, which rapidly succumb to spontaneous thymic lymphomas, early-onset tumor formation does not occur in either p53K117R/K117R or p533KR/3KR animals. Notably, p533KR retains the ability to regulate energy metabolism and reactive oxygen species production. These findings underscore the crucial role of acetylation in differentially modulating p53 responses and suggest that unconventional activities of p53, such as metabolic regulation and antioxidant function, are critical for suppression of early-onset spontaneous tumorigenesis.
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