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Mycoplasma infection suppresses p53, activates NF-κB and cooperates with oncogenic Ras in rodent fibroblast transformation
Author(s) -
Denis Y. Logunov,
Dmitry Scheblyakov,
Olga V. Zubkova,
М. М. Шмаров,
I. V. Rakovskaya,
Katerina V. Gurova,
Natalia D. Tararova,
Lyudmila Burdelya,
Boris S. Naroditsky,
A. Ginzburg,
Andrei V. Gudkov
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
oncogene
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.395
H-Index - 342
eISSN - 1476-5594
pISSN - 0950-9232
DOI - 10.1038/onc.2008.103
Subject(s) - biology , mycoplasma , malignant transformation , apoptosis , carcinogenesis , neoplastic transformation , fibroblast , cell culture , microbiology and biotechnology , cancer research , gene , genetics
Prokaryotes of the genus Mycoplasma are the smallest cellular organisms that persist as obligate extracellular parasites. Although mycoplasma infection is known to be associated with chromosomal instability and can promote malignant transformation, the mechanisms underlying these phenomena remain unknown. Since persistence of many cellular parasites requires suppression of apoptosis in host cells, we tested the effect of mycoplasma infection on the activity of the p53 and nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB pathways, major mechanisms controlling programmed cell death. To monitor the activity of p53 and NF-kappaB in mycoplasma-infected cells, we used a panel of reporter cell lines expressing the bacterial beta-galactosidase gene under the control of p53- or NF-kappaB-responsive promoters. Cells incubated with media conditioned with different species of mycoplasma showed constitutive activation of NF-kappaB and reduced activation of p53, common characteristics of the majority of human tumor cells, with M. arginini having the strongest effect among the species tested. Moreover, mycoplasma infection reduced the expression level and inducibility of an endogenous p53-responsive gene, p21(waf1), and inhibited apoptosis induced by genotoxic stress. Infection with M. arginini made rat and mouse embryo fibroblasts susceptible to transformation with oncogenic H-Ras, whereas mycoplasma-free cells underwent irreversible p53-dependent growth arrest. Mycoplasma infection was as effective as shRNA-mediated knockdown of p53 expression in making rodent fibroblasts permissive to Ras-induced transformation. These observations indicate that mycoplasma infection plays the role of a p53-suppressing oncogene that cooperates with Ras in cell transformation and suggest that the carcinogenic and mutagenic effects of mycoplasma might be due to inhibition of p53 tumor suppressor function by this common human parasite.

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