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ΔN-P63α and TA-P63α exhibit intrinsic differences in transactivation specificities that depend on distinct features of DNA target sites

TP63 is a member of the TP53 gene family that encodes for up to ten different TA and ΔN isoforms through alternative promoter usage and alternative splicing. Besides being a master regulator of gene expression for squamous epithelial proliferation, differentiation and maintenance, P63, through diffe...

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Autores principales: Monti, Paola, Ciribilli, Yari, Bisio, Alessandra, Foggetti, Giorgia, Raimondi, Ivan, Campomenosi, Paola, Menichini, Paola, Fronza, Gilberto, Inga, Alberto
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4039150/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24926492
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author Monti, Paola
Ciribilli, Yari
Bisio, Alessandra
Foggetti, Giorgia
Raimondi, Ivan
Campomenosi, Paola
Menichini, Paola
Fronza, Gilberto
Inga, Alberto
author_facet Monti, Paola
Ciribilli, Yari
Bisio, Alessandra
Foggetti, Giorgia
Raimondi, Ivan
Campomenosi, Paola
Menichini, Paola
Fronza, Gilberto
Inga, Alberto
author_sort Monti, Paola
collection PubMed
description TP63 is a member of the TP53 gene family that encodes for up to ten different TA and ΔN isoforms through alternative promoter usage and alternative splicing. Besides being a master regulator of gene expression for squamous epithelial proliferation, differentiation and maintenance, P63, through differential expression of its isoforms, plays important roles in tumorigenesis. All P63 isoforms share an immunoglobulin-like folded DNA binding domain responsible for binding to sequence-specific response elements (REs), whose overall consensus sequence is similar to that of the canonical p53 RE. Using a defined assay in yeast, where P63 isoforms and RE sequences are the only variables, and gene expression assays in human cell lines, we demonstrated that human TA- and ΔN-P63α proteins exhibited differences in transactivation specificity not observed with the corresponding P73 or P53 protein isoforms. These differences 1) were dependent on specific features of the RE sequence, 2) could be related to intrinsic differences in their oligomeric state and cooperative DNA binding, and 3) appeared to be conserved in evolution. Since genotoxic stress can change relative ratio of TA- and ΔN-P63α protein levels, the different transactivation specificity of each P63 isoform could potentially influence cellular responses to specific stresses.
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spelling pubmed-40391502014-06-10 ΔN-P63α and TA-P63α exhibit intrinsic differences in transactivation specificities that depend on distinct features of DNA target sites Monti, Paola Ciribilli, Yari Bisio, Alessandra Foggetti, Giorgia Raimondi, Ivan Campomenosi, Paola Menichini, Paola Fronza, Gilberto Inga, Alberto Oncotarget Research Paper TP63 is a member of the TP53 gene family that encodes for up to ten different TA and ΔN isoforms through alternative promoter usage and alternative splicing. Besides being a master regulator of gene expression for squamous epithelial proliferation, differentiation and maintenance, P63, through differential expression of its isoforms, plays important roles in tumorigenesis. All P63 isoforms share an immunoglobulin-like folded DNA binding domain responsible for binding to sequence-specific response elements (REs), whose overall consensus sequence is similar to that of the canonical p53 RE. Using a defined assay in yeast, where P63 isoforms and RE sequences are the only variables, and gene expression assays in human cell lines, we demonstrated that human TA- and ΔN-P63α proteins exhibited differences in transactivation specificity not observed with the corresponding P73 or P53 protein isoforms. These differences 1) were dependent on specific features of the RE sequence, 2) could be related to intrinsic differences in their oligomeric state and cooperative DNA binding, and 3) appeared to be conserved in evolution. Since genotoxic stress can change relative ratio of TA- and ΔN-P63α protein levels, the different transactivation specificity of each P63 isoform could potentially influence cellular responses to specific stresses. Impact Journals LLC 2014-03-23 /pmc/articles/PMC4039150/ /pubmed/24926492 Text en Copyright: © 2014 Monti et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ 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 credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Monti, Paola
Ciribilli, Yari
Bisio, Alessandra
Foggetti, Giorgia
Raimondi, Ivan
Campomenosi, Paola
Menichini, Paola
Fronza, Gilberto
Inga, Alberto
ΔN-P63α and TA-P63α exhibit intrinsic differences in transactivation specificities that depend on distinct features of DNA target sites
title ΔN-P63α and TA-P63α exhibit intrinsic differences in transactivation specificities that depend on distinct features of DNA target sites
title_full ΔN-P63α and TA-P63α exhibit intrinsic differences in transactivation specificities that depend on distinct features of DNA target sites
title_fullStr ΔN-P63α and TA-P63α exhibit intrinsic differences in transactivation specificities that depend on distinct features of DNA target sites
title_full_unstemmed ΔN-P63α and TA-P63α exhibit intrinsic differences in transactivation specificities that depend on distinct features of DNA target sites
title_short ΔN-P63α and TA-P63α exhibit intrinsic differences in transactivation specificities that depend on distinct features of DNA target sites
title_sort δn-p63α and ta-p63α exhibit intrinsic differences in transactivation specificities that depend on distinct features of dna target sites
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4039150/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24926492
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