[HTML][HTML] The complexity of p53 stabilization and activation

MF Lavin, N Gueven - Cell Death & Differentiation, 2006 - nature.com
MF Lavin, N Gueven
Cell Death & Differentiation, 2006nature.com
A number of proteins are activated by stress stimuli but none so spectacularly or with the
degree of complexity as the tumour suppressor p53 (human p53 gene or protein). Once
stabilized, p53 is responsible for the transcriptional activation of a series of proteins involved
in cell cycle control, apoptosis and senescence. This protein is present at low levels in
resting cells but after exposure to DNA-damaging agents and other stress stimuli it is
stabilized and activated by a series of post-translational modifications that free it from MDM2 …
Abstract
A number of proteins are activated by stress stimuli but none so spectacularly or with the degree of complexity as the tumour suppressor p53 (human p53 gene or protein). Once stabilized, p53 is responsible for the transcriptional activation of a series of proteins involved in cell cycle control, apoptosis and senescence. This protein is present at low levels in resting cells but after exposure to DNA-damaging agents and other stress stimuli it is stabilized and activated by a series of post-translational modifications that free it from MDM2 (mouse double minute 2 but used interchangeably to denote human also), a ubiquination ligase that ubiquitinates it prior to proteasome degradation. The stability of p53 is also influenced by a series of other interacting proteins. In this review, we discuss the post-translational modifications to p53 in response to different stresses and the consequences of these changes.
nature.com