Cooperation between p53 and p130(Rb2) in induction of cellular senescence

Authors:
Kapic A, Helmbold H, Reimer R, Klotzsche O, Deppert W and Bohn W
In:
Source: Cell Death Differ
Publication Date: (2006)
Issue: 13(2): 324-334
Research Area:
Cancer Research/Cell Biology
Cells used in publication:
C6
Species: rat
Tissue Origin: brain
Platform:
Nucleofector® I/II/2b
Experiment


Abstract

To determine pathways cooperating with p53 in cellular senescence when the retinoblastoma protein (pRb)/p16INK4a pathway is defunct, we stably transfected the p16INK4a-negative C6 rat glioma cell line with a temperature-sensitive mutant p53. Activation of p53(Val-135) induces a switch in pocket protein expression from pRb and p107 to p130(Rb2) and stalls the cells in late G1, early S-phase at high levels of cyclin E. Maintenance of the arrest depends on the functions of p130(Rb2) repressing cyclin A. Inactivation of p53 in senescent cultures restores the pocket proteins to initial levels and initiates progression into S-phase, but the cells fail to resume proliferation, likely due to DNA damage becoming apparent in the arrest and activating apoptosis subsequent to the release from p53-dependent growth suppression. The data indicate that p53 can cooperate selectively with p130(Rb2) to induce cellular senescence, a pathway that may be relevant when the pRb/p16INK4a pathway is defunct.Cell Death and Differentiation (2006) 13, 324-334. doi:10.1038/sj.cdd.4401756; published online 26 August 2005.