Signal Transduction Involving the Dmp1 Transcription Factor and its Alteration in Human Cancer
Author(s) -
Takayuki Sugiyama,
Donna P. Frazier,
Pankaj Taneja,
Robert D. Kendig,
Rachel L. Morgan,
Lauren A. Matise,
Sarah J. Lagedrost,
Kazushi Inoue
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
clinical medicine oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1177-9314
DOI - 10.4137/cmo.s548
Subject(s) - dmp1 , cancer research , transcription factor , cyclin , carcinogenesis , biology , cyclin d1 , oncogene , cell cycle , cyclin d , microbiology and biotechnology , cell , gene , genetics , viral matrix protein
Dmp1 (cyclin D-interacting myb-like protein 1; also called Dmtf1) is a transcription factor that has been isolated in a yeast two-hybrid screen through its binding property to cyclin D2. Dmp1 directly binds to and activates the Arf promoter and induces Arf-p53-dependent cell cycle arrest in primary cells. D-type cyclins usually inhibit Dmp1-mediated transcription in a Cdk-independent fashion; however, Dmp1 shows synergistic effects with D-cyclins on the Arf promoter. Ras or Myc oncogene-induced tumor formation is accelerated in both Dmp1(+/-) and Dmp1(-/-) mice with no significant differences between Dmp1(+/-) and Dmp1(-/-). Thus, Dmp1 is haplo-insufficient for tumor suppression. Tumors from Dmp1(-/-) or Dmp1(+/-) mice often retain wild-type Arf and p53, suggesting that Dmp1 is a physiological regulator of the Arf-p53 pathway. The Dmp1 promoter is activated by oncogenic Ras-Raf signaling, while it is repressed by physiological mitogenic stimuli, overexpression of E2F proteins, and genotoxic stimuli mediated by NF-κB. The human DMP1 gene (hDMP1) is located on chromosome 7q21 and is hemizygously deleted in approximately 40% of human lung cancers, especially those that retain normal INK4a/ARF and P53 loci. Thus, hDMP1 is clearly involved in human carcinogenesis, and tumors with hDMP1 deletion may constitute a discrete disease entity.
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