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Senescence evasion in melanoma progression: uncoupling of DNA-damage signaling from p53 activation and p21 expression

The best-established function of the melanoma-suppressor p16 is mediation of cell senescence, a permanent arrest following cell proliferation or certain stresses. The importance of p16 in melanoma suggests indolence of the other major senescence pathway through p53. Little or no p53 is expressed in...

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Autores principales: MacKenzie Ross, Alastair D, Cook, Martin G, Chong, Heung, Hossain, Mehnaz, Pandha, Hardev S, Bennett, Dorothy C
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3963476/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23253087
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pcmr.12060
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author MacKenzie Ross, Alastair D
Cook, Martin G
Chong, Heung
Hossain, Mehnaz
Pandha, Hardev S
Bennett, Dorothy C
author_facet MacKenzie Ross, Alastair D
Cook, Martin G
Chong, Heung
Hossain, Mehnaz
Pandha, Hardev S
Bennett, Dorothy C
author_sort MacKenzie Ross, Alastair D
collection PubMed
description The best-established function of the melanoma-suppressor p16 is mediation of cell senescence, a permanent arrest following cell proliferation or certain stresses. The importance of p16 in melanoma suggests indolence of the other major senescence pathway through p53. Little or no p53 is expressed in senescent normal human melanocytes, but p16-deficient melanocytes can undergo p53-mediated senescence. As p16 expression occurs in nevi but falls with progression toward melanoma, we here investigated whether p53-dependent senescence occurs at some stage and, if not, what defects were detectable in this pathway, using immunohistochemistry. Phosphorylated checkpoint kinase 2 (CHEK2) can mediate DNA-damage signaling, and under some conditions senescence, by phosphorylating and activating p53. Remarkably, we detected no prevalent p53-mediated senescence in any of six classes of lesions. Two separate defects in p53 signaling appeared common: in nevi, lack of p53 phosphorylation by activated CHEK2, and in melanomas, defective p21 upregulation by p53 even when phosphorylated.
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spelling pubmed-39634762014-03-25 Senescence evasion in melanoma progression: uncoupling of DNA-damage signaling from p53 activation and p21 expression MacKenzie Ross, Alastair D Cook, Martin G Chong, Heung Hossain, Mehnaz Pandha, Hardev S Bennett, Dorothy C Pigment Cell Melanoma Res Research Articles The best-established function of the melanoma-suppressor p16 is mediation of cell senescence, a permanent arrest following cell proliferation or certain stresses. The importance of p16 in melanoma suggests indolence of the other major senescence pathway through p53. Little or no p53 is expressed in senescent normal human melanocytes, but p16-deficient melanocytes can undergo p53-mediated senescence. As p16 expression occurs in nevi but falls with progression toward melanoma, we here investigated whether p53-dependent senescence occurs at some stage and, if not, what defects were detectable in this pathway, using immunohistochemistry. Phosphorylated checkpoint kinase 2 (CHEK2) can mediate DNA-damage signaling, and under some conditions senescence, by phosphorylating and activating p53. Remarkably, we detected no prevalent p53-mediated senescence in any of six classes of lesions. Two separate defects in p53 signaling appeared common: in nevi, lack of p53 phosphorylation by activated CHEK2, and in melanomas, defective p21 upregulation by p53 even when phosphorylated. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2013-03 2013-01-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3963476/ /pubmed/23253087 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pcmr.12060 Text en © 2013 John Wiley & Sons A/S
spellingShingle Research Articles
MacKenzie Ross, Alastair D
Cook, Martin G
Chong, Heung
Hossain, Mehnaz
Pandha, Hardev S
Bennett, Dorothy C
Senescence evasion in melanoma progression: uncoupling of DNA-damage signaling from p53 activation and p21 expression
title Senescence evasion in melanoma progression: uncoupling of DNA-damage signaling from p53 activation and p21 expression
title_full Senescence evasion in melanoma progression: uncoupling of DNA-damage signaling from p53 activation and p21 expression
title_fullStr Senescence evasion in melanoma progression: uncoupling of DNA-damage signaling from p53 activation and p21 expression
title_full_unstemmed Senescence evasion in melanoma progression: uncoupling of DNA-damage signaling from p53 activation and p21 expression
title_short Senescence evasion in melanoma progression: uncoupling of DNA-damage signaling from p53 activation and p21 expression
title_sort senescence evasion in melanoma progression: uncoupling of dna-damage signaling from p53 activation and p21 expression
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3963476/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23253087
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pcmr.12060
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