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E7 Abolishes Raf-Induced Arrest via Mislocalization of p21Cip1
Author(s) -
Thomas F. Westbrook,
Don X. Nguyen,
Barry R. Thrash,
Dennis J. McCance
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.22.20.7041-7052.2002
Subject(s) - protein kinase b , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , context (archaeology) , cell cycle checkpoint , cyclin dependent kinase , kinase , phosphorylation , cancer research , cyclin , cell cycle , biochemistry , apoptosis , paleontology
The cellular response to oncogenic Ras depends upon the presence or absence of cooperating mutations. In the absence of immortalizing oncogenes or genetic lesions, activation of the Ras/Raf pathway results in a p21(Cip1)-dependent cellular arrest. The human papillomavirus oncoprotein E7 transforms primary cells in cooperation with Ras and abolishes p21(Cip1)-mediated growth arrest in the presence of various antimitogenic signals. Here we have utilized a conditional Raf molecule to investigate the effects of E7 on p21(Cip1) function in the context of Raf-induced cellular arrest. E7 bypassed Raf-induced arrest and alleviated inhibition of cyclin E-CDK2 without suppressing Raf-specific synthesis of p21(Cip1) or derepressing p21(Cip1)-associated CDK2 complexes. Activation of Raf led to nuclear accumulation of p21(Cip1), and we provide evidence that this effect is mediated by inhibition of Akt, a regulator of p21(Cip1) localization. Loss of Akt activity appears to be an important event in the cellular arrest associated with Raf-induction, since maintenance of Akt activity was necessary and sufficient to bypass Raf-induced arrest. In agreement, expression of E7 sustained Akt activity and reduced nuclear accumulation of p21(Cip1), resulting in decreased association between p21(Cip1) and cyclin E-CDK2. Taken together, these data suggest that E7 inhibits p21(Cip1) function in the context of Raf signaling by altering Raf-Akt antagonism and preventing the proper subcellular localization of p21(Cip1). We propose that E7 elicits a proliferative response to Raf signaling by targeting p21(Cip1) function via a novel mechanism.

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