Abstract
A possible role of p53-dependent transcription in the induction of DNA repair was explored by transfecting a UV-irradiated chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) reporter plasmid (pRGC.FOS.CAT), containing a minimal FOS promoter driven by a consensus p53 binding site, into a p53 negative-mouse cell line [(10)1]. When a p53-expressing plasmid (pSV.p53) was cotransfected into these cells, CAT expression levels persisted even after prolonged UV irradiation. In comparison, CAT expression from pSV2.CAT, which lacks a p53-responsive element in its SV40 promoter, dropped off much more precipitously after UV irradiation in the absence or presence of WT p53 expression. A similar sharp drop was observed with three other constructs when the reporter gene was under the control of the ras, β-actin or fos promoter. Mouse cells (A1-5) that constitutively express a temperature-sensitive mutant (135 AV) of mouse p53 also generated, at 32°C, higher levels of enzyme expressed from UV-irradiated pRGC.FOS.CAT than from UV-irradiated pSV2.CAT. The frequency of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in UV-irradiated pRGC.FOS.CAT was determined with T4 endo V, and the probability of having an undamaged CAT coding strand was calculated by the Poisson distribution for various times of UV-irradiation. The observed relative CAT expression levels from irradiated pSV2.CAT and pRGC.FOS.CAT in the absence of p53 were consistent with those numbers. These results show that WT p53-mediated transcription directs a resistance of the transcribed DNA to UV inactivation and reactivates the reporter gene. Furthermore, some single point substitution mutants of p53 that maintain a near normal ability to activate transcription had lost their ability to extend CAT gene expression after UV irradiation. Conversely, other mutants with reduced transcriptional activity retained this ability. This indicates that although resistance to UV inactivation is transcriptionally-dependent, these two activities are genetically distinct. These data, taken together, suggest that the transcription of UV-damaged DNA by a p53-dependent process promotes its repair.
This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution
Access options
Subscribe to this journal
Receive 50 print issues and online access
$259.00 per year
only $5.18 per issue
Buy this article
- Purchase on SpringerLink
- Instant access to the full article PDF.
USD 39.95
Prices may be subject to local taxes which are calculated during checkout
Similar content being viewed by others
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Huang, J., Logsdon, N., Schmieg, F. et al. p53-mediated transcription induces resistance of DNA to UV inactivation. Oncogene 17, 401–411 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.onc.1201951
Received:
Revised:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.onc.1201951
Keywords
This article is cited by
-
New p53 target, phosphatase of regenerating liver 1 (PRL-1) downregulates p53
Oncogene (2009)
-
Pre-UV-Treatment of Cells Results in Enhanced Host Cell Reactivation of a UV Damaged Reporter Gene in CHO-AA8 Chinese Hamster Ovary Cells but Not in Transcription-Coupled Repair Deficient CHO-UV61 Cells
Bioscience Reports (2004)
-
γ-Irradiation enhances transgene expression in leukemic cells
Gene Therapy (2003)
-
Defects in transcription coupled repair interfere with expression of p90MDM2 in response to ultraviolet light
Oncogene (2001)


