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Acetylation Is Crucial for p53-Mediated Ferroptosis and Tumor Suppression
Author(s) -
Shang-Jui Wang,
Dawei Li,
Yang Ou,
Le Jiang,
Yue Chen,
Yingming Zhao,
Wei Gu
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.09.022
Subject(s) - acetylation , transactivation , mdm2 , cell cycle checkpoint , senescence , cell cycle , cancer research , apoptosis , lysine , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , gene , biochemistry , transcription factor , amino acid
Although previous studies indicate that loss of p53-mediated cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and senescence does not completely abrogate its tumor suppression function, it is unclear how the remaining activities of p53 are regulated. Here, we have identified an acetylation site at lysine K98 in mouse p53 (or K101 for human p53). Whereas the loss of K98 acetylation (p53 K98R ) alone has very modest effects on p53-mediated transactivation, simultaneous mutations at all four acetylation sites (p53 4KR : K98R+ 3KR[K117R+K161R+K162R]) completely abolish its ability to regulate metabolic targets, such as TIGAR and SLC7A11. Notably, in contrast to p53 3KR , p53 4KR is severely defective in suppressing tumor growth in mouse xenograft models. Moreover, p53 4KR is still capable of inducing the p53-Mdm2 feedback loop, but p53-dependent ferroptotic responses are markedly abrogated. Together, these data indicate the critical role of p53 acetylation in ferroptotic responses and its remaining tumor suppression activity.

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