OVEREXPRESSION OF HUMAN P21ʷᵃᶠ¹⸍ᶜⁱᵖ¹ ARRESTS THE GROWTH OF CHICKEN EMBRYO FIBROBLASTS TRANSFORMED BY INDIVIDUAL ONCOGENES
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Date
1998-01
Type of Work
Department
Hood College Biology
Program
Biomedical and Environmental Science
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Abstract
In normal cells, cell growth and division are controlled by the interplay
between proto-oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes. Cancer cells usually
have both activated an oncogene and lost a functional tumor suppressor gene.
This study addresses the interrelationship between these positive and negative
growth regulators. The main focus is on p21ʷᵃᶠ¹⸍ᶜⁱᵖ¹, a cyclin/cdk inhibitor whose
expression is regulated by p53. High level expression of the p53 tumor
suppressor can block the growth of cancer cells. Wafl/cipl is transactivated by
p53 and the p21ʷᵃᶠ¹⸍ᶜⁱᵖ¹ protein is itself a suppressor of cell growth. To test the
growth suppression effect of p21ʷᵃᶠ¹⸍ᶜⁱᵖ¹ or p53 on the growth of normal cells and
cells transformed by individual oncogenes, we used replication-competent
retroviral vectors to induce high level expression of p53 and p21ʷᵃᶠ¹⸍ᶜⁱᵖ¹ in
chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEF). These are primary cells and by using them
we avoid the complications that arise when such experiments are done with
established cell lines. This study shows that overexpression of p21ʷᵃᶠ¹⸍ᶜⁱᵖ¹ or p53
arrests the growth of CEF at the G 1 phase of the cell cycle by inhibiting DNA
synthesis.
We next asked whether the growth inhibition induced by p21ʷᵃᶠ¹⸍ᶜⁱᵖ¹ could
be overcome by mitogenic signals delivered by a variety of oncogenes. We
show that the growth of CEF transformed by v-Src, tf-Ras, c-Mos and c-Myc is
inhibited by overexpression of p21ʷᵃᶠ¹⸍ᶜⁱᵖ¹. This suggests that p21ʷᵃᶠ¹⸍ᶜⁱᵖ¹ functions
downstream of these oncogenes, suggesting that mitogenic signals converge at
the cyclin/cdk complex. To address the interplay between positive and negative
signals within the cell cycle machinery, we used this system to test the effects
of overexpressing both p21ʷᵃᶠ¹⸍ᶜⁱᵖ¹ and E2F1, a subunit of the E2F transcription
factor, on the growth of CEF. The E2F transcription factors are released from
binding to hypophosphorylated pRb when pRb is phosphorylated by cyclin/cdks.
This allows for transcription of S phase genes and progression from G₁ to S
phase in the cell cycle. In this system very high levels of E2F1 overexpression
cause considerable apoptosis, however the surviving cells still overexpress E2F1.
These cells are transformed and their growth is blocked by overexpression of
p21ʷᵃᶠ¹⸍ᶜⁱᵖ¹.
These data suggest that p21ʷᵃᶠ¹⸍ᶜⁱᵖ¹ might be useful for gene therapy for
human cancer. We also show that the apoptosis induced by high levels of E2F1
can be blocked by Bc1-2, an inhibitor of apoptosis.