|
|
The p53 Tumor Suppressor Network Is a Key Responder
to Microenvironmental Components of Chronic Inflammatory Stress
Frank Staib, Ana I. Robles, Lyuba Varticovski, Xin W. Wang,
Barry R. Zeeberg, Michail Sirotin, Victor B. Zhurkin, Lorne J. Hofseth, S. Perwez Hussain,
John N. Weinstein, Peter R. Galle and Curtis C. Harris
Cancer Res. 2005 Nov 15;65(22):10255-10264.
 |
Abstract:
Activation of the p53 network plays a central role in the inflammatory stress response associated
with ulcerative colitis and may modulate cancer risk in patients afflicted with this chronic disease.
Here, we describe the gene expression profiles associated with four microenvironmental components of
the inflammatory response (NO(*), H(2)O(2), DNA replication arrest, and hypoxia) that result in p53
stabilization and activation. Isogenic HCT116 and HCT116 TP53(-/-) colon cancer cells were exposed to
the NO(*) donor Sper/NO, H(2)O(2), hypoxia, or hydroxyurea, and their mRNA was analyzed using oligonucleotide
microarrays. Overall, 1,396 genes changed in a p53-dependent manner (P < 0.001), with the majority representing
a "unique" profile for each condition. Only 14 genes were common to all four conditions. Included were eight known
p53 target genes. Hierarchical sample clustering distinguished early (1 and 4 hours) from late responses
(8, 12, and 24 hours), and each treatment was differentiated from the others. Overall, NO(*) and hypoxia stimulated
similar transcriptional responses. Gene ontology analysis revealed cell cycle as a key feature of stress responses
and confirmed the similarity between NO(*) and hypoxia. Cell cycle profiles analyzed by flow cytometry showed that
NO(*) and hypoxia induced quiescent S-phase and G(2)-M arrest. Using a novel bioinformatic algorithm, we identified
several putative p53-responsive elements among the genes induced in a p53-dependent manner, including four
[KIAA0247, FLJ12484, p53CSV (HSPC132), and CNK (PLK3)] common to all exposures. In summary, the inflammatory stress
response is a complex, integrated biological network in which p53 is a key molecular node regulating gene expression.
|