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P19 H-Ras Induces G1/S Phase Delay Maintaining Cells in a Reversible Quiescence State

BACKGROUND: Three functional c-ras genes, known as c-H-ras, c-K-ras, and c-N-ras, have been largely studied in mammalian cells with important insights into normal and tumorigenic cellular signal transduction events. Two K-Ras mRNAs are obtained from the same pre-mRNA by alternative splicing. H-Ras p...

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Autores principales: Camats, Maria, Kokolo, Mariette, Heesom, Kate J., Ladomery, Michael, Bach-Elias, Montse
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2798614/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20046837
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008513
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author Camats, Maria
Kokolo, Mariette
Heesom, Kate J.
Ladomery, Michael
Bach-Elias, Montse
author_facet Camats, Maria
Kokolo, Mariette
Heesom, Kate J.
Ladomery, Michael
Bach-Elias, Montse
author_sort Camats, Maria
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Three functional c-ras genes, known as c-H-ras, c-K-ras, and c-N-ras, have been largely studied in mammalian cells with important insights into normal and tumorigenic cellular signal transduction events. Two K-Ras mRNAs are obtained from the same pre-mRNA by alternative splicing. H-Ras pre-mRNA can also be alternatively spliced in the IDX and 4A terminal exons, yielding the p19 and p21 proteins, respectively. However, despite the Ras gene family's established role in tumorigenic cellular signal transduction events, little is known about p19 function. Previous results showed that p19 did not interact with two known p21 effectors, Raf1 and Rin1, but was shown to interact with RACK1, a scaffolding protein that promotes multi-protein complexes in different signaling pathways (Cancer Res 2003, 63 p5178). This observation suggests that p19 and p21 play differential and complementary roles in the cell. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We found that p19 regulates telomerase activity through its interaction with p73α/β proteins. We also found that p19 overexpression induces G1/S phase delay; an observation that correlates with hypophosphorylation of both Akt and p70SK6. Similarly, we also observed that FOXO1 is upregulated when p19 is overexpressed. The three observations of (1) hypophosphorylation of Akt, (2) G1/S phase delay and (3) upregulation of FOXO1 lead us to conclude that p19 induces G1/S phase delay, thereby maintaining cells in a reversible quiescence state and preventing entry into apoptosis. We then assessed the effect of p19 RNAi on HeLa cell growth and found that p19 RNAi increases cell growth, thereby having the opposite effect of arrest of the G1/S phase or producing a cellular quiescence state. SIGNIFICANCE: Interestingly, p19 induces FOXO1 that in combination with the G1/S phase delay and hypophosphorylation of both Akt and p70SK6 leads to maintenance of a reversible cellular quiescence state, thereby preventing entry into apoptosis.
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spelling pubmed-27986142009-12-31 P19 H-Ras Induces G1/S Phase Delay Maintaining Cells in a Reversible Quiescence State Camats, Maria Kokolo, Mariette Heesom, Kate J. Ladomery, Michael Bach-Elias, Montse PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Three functional c-ras genes, known as c-H-ras, c-K-ras, and c-N-ras, have been largely studied in mammalian cells with important insights into normal and tumorigenic cellular signal transduction events. Two K-Ras mRNAs are obtained from the same pre-mRNA by alternative splicing. H-Ras pre-mRNA can also be alternatively spliced in the IDX and 4A terminal exons, yielding the p19 and p21 proteins, respectively. However, despite the Ras gene family's established role in tumorigenic cellular signal transduction events, little is known about p19 function. Previous results showed that p19 did not interact with two known p21 effectors, Raf1 and Rin1, but was shown to interact with RACK1, a scaffolding protein that promotes multi-protein complexes in different signaling pathways (Cancer Res 2003, 63 p5178). This observation suggests that p19 and p21 play differential and complementary roles in the cell. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We found that p19 regulates telomerase activity through its interaction with p73α/β proteins. We also found that p19 overexpression induces G1/S phase delay; an observation that correlates with hypophosphorylation of both Akt and p70SK6. Similarly, we also observed that FOXO1 is upregulated when p19 is overexpressed. The three observations of (1) hypophosphorylation of Akt, (2) G1/S phase delay and (3) upregulation of FOXO1 lead us to conclude that p19 induces G1/S phase delay, thereby maintaining cells in a reversible quiescence state and preventing entry into apoptosis. We then assessed the effect of p19 RNAi on HeLa cell growth and found that p19 RNAi increases cell growth, thereby having the opposite effect of arrest of the G1/S phase or producing a cellular quiescence state. SIGNIFICANCE: Interestingly, p19 induces FOXO1 that in combination with the G1/S phase delay and hypophosphorylation of both Akt and p70SK6 leads to maintenance of a reversible cellular quiescence state, thereby preventing entry into apoptosis. Public Library of Science 2009-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2798614/ /pubmed/20046837 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008513 Text en Camats et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Camats, Maria
Kokolo, Mariette
Heesom, Kate J.
Ladomery, Michael
Bach-Elias, Montse
P19 H-Ras Induces G1/S Phase Delay Maintaining Cells in a Reversible Quiescence State
title P19 H-Ras Induces G1/S Phase Delay Maintaining Cells in a Reversible Quiescence State
title_full P19 H-Ras Induces G1/S Phase Delay Maintaining Cells in a Reversible Quiescence State
title_fullStr P19 H-Ras Induces G1/S Phase Delay Maintaining Cells in a Reversible Quiescence State
title_full_unstemmed P19 H-Ras Induces G1/S Phase Delay Maintaining Cells in a Reversible Quiescence State
title_short P19 H-Ras Induces G1/S Phase Delay Maintaining Cells in a Reversible Quiescence State
title_sort p19 h-ras induces g1/s phase delay maintaining cells in a reversible quiescence state
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2798614/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20046837
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008513
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