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Deficiency of G1 regulators P53, P21(Cip1 )and/or pRb decreases hepatocyte sensitivity to TGFβ cell cycle arrest

BACKGROUND: TGFβ is critical to control hepatocyte proliferation by inducing G1-growth arrest through multiple pathways leading to inhibition of E2F transcription activity. The retinoblastoma protein pRb is a key controller of E2F activity and G1/S transition which can be inhibited in viral hepatiti...

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Autores principales: Sheahan, Sharon, Bellamy, Christopher O, Dunbar, Donald R, Harrison, David J, Prost, Sandrine
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2206047/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18021445
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-7-215
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author Sheahan, Sharon
Bellamy, Christopher O
Dunbar, Donald R
Harrison, David J
Prost, Sandrine
author_facet Sheahan, Sharon
Bellamy, Christopher O
Dunbar, Donald R
Harrison, David J
Prost, Sandrine
author_sort Sheahan, Sharon
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: TGFβ is critical to control hepatocyte proliferation by inducing G1-growth arrest through multiple pathways leading to inhibition of E2F transcription activity. The retinoblastoma protein pRb is a key controller of E2F activity and G1/S transition which can be inhibited in viral hepatitis. It is not known whether the impairment of pRb would alter the growth inhibitory potential of TGFβ in disease. We asked how Rb-deficiency would affect responses to TGFβ-induced cell cycle arrest. RESULTS: Primary hepatocytes isolated from Rb-floxed mice were infected with an adenovirus expressing CRE-recombinase to delete the Rb gene. In control cells treatment with TGFβ prevented cells to enter S phase via decreased cMYC activity, activation of P16(INK4A )and P21(Cip )and reduction of E2F activity. In Rb-null hepatocytes, cMYC activity decreased slightly but P16(INK4A )was not activated and the great majority of cells continued cycling. Rb is therefore central to TGFβ-induced cell cycle arrest in hepatocytes. However some Rb-null hepatocytes remained sensitive to TGFβ-induced cell cycle arrest. As these hepatocytes expressed very high levels of P21(Cip1 )and P53 we investigated whether these proteins regulate pRb-independent signaling to cell cycle arrest by evaluating the consequences of disruption of p53 and p21(Cip1). Hepatocytes deficient in p53 or p21(Cip1 )showed diminished growth inhibition by TGFβ. Double deficiency had a similar impact showing that in cells containing functional pRb; P21(Cip )and P53 work through the same pathway to regulate G1/S in response to TGFβ. In Rb-deficient cells however, p53 but not p21(Cip )deficiency had an additive effect highlighting a pRb-independent-P53-dependent effector pathway of inhibition of E2F activity. CONCLUSION: The present results show that otherwise genetically normal hepatocytes with disabled p53, p21(Cip1 )or Rb genes respond less well to the antiproliferative effects of TGFβ. As the function of these critical cellular proteins can be impaired by common causes of chronic liver disease and HCC, including viral hepatitis B and C proteins, we suggest that disruption of pRb function, and to a lesser extend P21(Cip1 )and P53 in hepatocytes may represent an additional new mechanism of escape from TGFβ-growth-inhibition in the inflammatory milieu of chronic liver disease and contribute to cancer development.
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spelling pubmed-22060472008-01-18 Deficiency of G1 regulators P53, P21(Cip1 )and/or pRb decreases hepatocyte sensitivity to TGFβ cell cycle arrest Sheahan, Sharon Bellamy, Christopher O Dunbar, Donald R Harrison, David J Prost, Sandrine BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: TGFβ is critical to control hepatocyte proliferation by inducing G1-growth arrest through multiple pathways leading to inhibition of E2F transcription activity. The retinoblastoma protein pRb is a key controller of E2F activity and G1/S transition which can be inhibited in viral hepatitis. It is not known whether the impairment of pRb would alter the growth inhibitory potential of TGFβ in disease. We asked how Rb-deficiency would affect responses to TGFβ-induced cell cycle arrest. RESULTS: Primary hepatocytes isolated from Rb-floxed mice were infected with an adenovirus expressing CRE-recombinase to delete the Rb gene. In control cells treatment with TGFβ prevented cells to enter S phase via decreased cMYC activity, activation of P16(INK4A )and P21(Cip )and reduction of E2F activity. In Rb-null hepatocytes, cMYC activity decreased slightly but P16(INK4A )was not activated and the great majority of cells continued cycling. Rb is therefore central to TGFβ-induced cell cycle arrest in hepatocytes. However some Rb-null hepatocytes remained sensitive to TGFβ-induced cell cycle arrest. As these hepatocytes expressed very high levels of P21(Cip1 )and P53 we investigated whether these proteins regulate pRb-independent signaling to cell cycle arrest by evaluating the consequences of disruption of p53 and p21(Cip1). Hepatocytes deficient in p53 or p21(Cip1 )showed diminished growth inhibition by TGFβ. Double deficiency had a similar impact showing that in cells containing functional pRb; P21(Cip )and P53 work through the same pathway to regulate G1/S in response to TGFβ. In Rb-deficient cells however, p53 but not p21(Cip )deficiency had an additive effect highlighting a pRb-independent-P53-dependent effector pathway of inhibition of E2F activity. CONCLUSION: The present results show that otherwise genetically normal hepatocytes with disabled p53, p21(Cip1 )or Rb genes respond less well to the antiproliferative effects of TGFβ. As the function of these critical cellular proteins can be impaired by common causes of chronic liver disease and HCC, including viral hepatitis B and C proteins, we suggest that disruption of pRb function, and to a lesser extend P21(Cip1 )and P53 in hepatocytes may represent an additional new mechanism of escape from TGFβ-growth-inhibition in the inflammatory milieu of chronic liver disease and contribute to cancer development. BioMed Central 2007-11-19 /pmc/articles/PMC2206047/ /pubmed/18021445 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-7-215 Text en Copyright © 2007 Sheahan et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sheahan, Sharon
Bellamy, Christopher O
Dunbar, Donald R
Harrison, David J
Prost, Sandrine
Deficiency of G1 regulators P53, P21(Cip1 )and/or pRb decreases hepatocyte sensitivity to TGFβ cell cycle arrest
title Deficiency of G1 regulators P53, P21(Cip1 )and/or pRb decreases hepatocyte sensitivity to TGFβ cell cycle arrest
title_full Deficiency of G1 regulators P53, P21(Cip1 )and/or pRb decreases hepatocyte sensitivity to TGFβ cell cycle arrest
title_fullStr Deficiency of G1 regulators P53, P21(Cip1 )and/or pRb decreases hepatocyte sensitivity to TGFβ cell cycle arrest
title_full_unstemmed Deficiency of G1 regulators P53, P21(Cip1 )and/or pRb decreases hepatocyte sensitivity to TGFβ cell cycle arrest
title_short Deficiency of G1 regulators P53, P21(Cip1 )and/or pRb decreases hepatocyte sensitivity to TGFβ cell cycle arrest
title_sort deficiency of g1 regulators p53, p21(cip1 )and/or prb decreases hepatocyte sensitivity to tgfβ cell cycle arrest
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2206047/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18021445
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-7-215
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