Abstract 2538: p53 activation induces cell cycle arrest by promoting DREAM and RB repression of cell cycle genes

Abstract p53 activation results cell cycle arrest at the G1/S checkpoint and the repression of early (G1/S) and late (G2/M) cell cycle gene expression in a p21 dependent manner. The mechanism how p53 and p21 repress cell cycle gene expression is unclear. p21 is known to repress CDK2 which is a key i...

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Published inCancer research (Chicago, Ill.) Vol. 79; no. 13_Supplement; p. 2538
Main Authors Schade, Amy E., Fischer, Martin, DeCaprio, James A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.07.2019
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Summary:Abstract p53 activation results cell cycle arrest at the G1/S checkpoint and the repression of early (G1/S) and late (G2/M) cell cycle gene expression in a p21 dependent manner. The mechanism how p53 and p21 repress cell cycle gene expression is unclear. p21 is known to repress CDK2 which is a key inhibitor of the pocket protein family members RB and p130. During a normal cell cycle, p130 as part of the DREAM complex (DP1, RB-like p130, E2F4, and MuvB) and RB cooperate to repress expression of early (G1/S) and late (G2/M) cell cycle gene expression. DREAM binds and represses late (G2/M) cell cycle promoters through MuvB binding and early (G1/S) cell cycle promoters though repressor E2F binding. RB is only able to bind and repress early (G1/S) cell cycle promoters through its interaction with activator E2Fs. The requirement for DREAM and RB for control of cell cycle gene expression after p53 activation was unknown. We hypothesized that DREAM and RB would cooperate to repress cell cycle gene expression after DNA damage. Using primary human foreskin fibroblast cells lacking RB and/or p130, we found repression of early and late cell cycle gene expression is differentially regulated after p53 activation. We found that while RB is required for repression of early (G1/S) cell cycle genes after p53 activation, DREAM is required for repression of expression of late (G2/M) cell cycle genes. Surprisingly, DREAM was unable to repress early cell cycle genes after p53 activation, suggesting that RB is the key regulator of G1/S gene expression during cellular stress like DNA damage. Further, the requirement for DREAM to repress late cell cycle gene expression underlies the importance of DREAM to prevent expression of mitosis inducing genes in a state like DNA damage when mitosis could result in propagation of mutated DNA. We found that p107, a protein reported be able to replace p130 in DREAM, does not potently repress early cell cycle genes in HFFs under contact arrest and serum starvation. However, we found that p107 strongly represses expression of late cell cycle genes during G0 in cells lacking p130 alone or in combination with RB. These data provide evidence for a specific role for p107-DREAM not previously appreciated. Together, our data show that control of cell cycle gene expression after p53 activation is split in two: RB represses early cell cycle genes while DREAM represses late cell cycle genes. Citation Format: Amy E. Schade, Martin Fischer, James A. DeCaprio. p53 activation induces cell cycle arrest by promoting DREAM and RB repression of cell cycle genes [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 2538.
ISSN:0008-5472
1538-7445
DOI:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2019-2538