Abstract

The tumor suppressor gene p53 is involved in a variety of cellular activities such as cellular stress responses, cell cycle regulation and differentiation. In our previous studies we have shown p53’s transcription activating role to be important in osteoblast differentiation. There is still a debate in the literature as to whether p53 inhibits or promotes differentiation. We have found p53 heterozygous mice to show a p53 dependency on some bone marker gene expression that is absent in knockout mice. Mice heterozygous for p53 also show a higher incidence of osteosarcomas than p53 knockout mice. This suggests that p53 is able to modify the environment within osteoblasts. In this study we compare changes in gene expression resulting after either a transient or stable reduction in p53. Accordingly we reduced p53 levels transiently and stably in C2C12 cells, which are capable of both myoblast and osteoblast differentiation, and compared the changes in gene expression of candidate genes regulated by the p53 pathway. Using a PCR array to assay for p53 target genes, we have found different expression profiles when comparing stable versus transient knockdown of p53. As expected, several genes with profound changes after transient p53 loss were related to apoptosis and cell cycle regulation. In contrast, stable p53 loss produced a greater change in MyoD and other transcription factors with tissue specific roles, suggesting that long term loss of p53 affects tissue homeostasis to a greater degree than changes resulting from acute loss of p53. These differences in gene expression were validated by measuring promoter activity of different pathway specific genes involved in differentiation. These studies suggest that an important role for p53 is context dependent, with a stable reduction in p53 expression affecting normal tissue physiology more than acute loss of p53.

Highlights

  • The tumor suppressor gene, p53, has been widely investigated as a transcription factor involved in multiple cellular processes including DNA damage, hypoxia, and cell cycle regulation [1,2,3,4,5]

  • We have found the osteocalcin gene, which codes for a protein associated with terminal osteoblast differentiation, to be regulated by p53 in committed osteoblast cells [8]

  • We found greater changes in expression of MyoD and of other transcription factors with tissue specific roles in the stable p53 knockdown cells, which suggests that long term partial loss of p53 expression affects tissue homeostasis to a greater degree than changes resulting from transient loss of p53

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Summary

Introduction

The tumor suppressor gene, p53, has been widely investigated as a transcription factor involved in multiple cellular processes including DNA damage, hypoxia, and cell cycle regulation [1,2,3,4,5]. In p53 heterozygous mice, the tumor spectrum is altered with a higher incidence of osteosarcomas and soft tissue tumors than lymphomas. This could mean that there are functionally redundant pathways that make up for loss of p53 during development. We show differences in the promoter activities of genes involved in differentiation between stable and transient loss of p53. Together this points toward the role of p53 as being context dependent, with a stable loss affecting cellular differentiation more than a transient loss

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