Riva F, Zuco V, Vink A A, Supino R, Prosperi E
Centro di Studio per l'Istochimica del CNR, Piazza Botta 10, 27100 Pavia, Italy.
Carcinogenesis. 2001 Dec;22(12):1971-8. doi: 10.1093/carcin/22.12.1971.
The tumour suppressor gene TP53 plays an important role in the regulation of DNA repair, and particularly of nucleotide excision repair. The influence of p53 status on the efficiency of the principal steps of this repair pathway was investigated after UV-C irradiation in the human ovarian carcinoma cell line IGROV-1 (expressing wild-type p53) and in the derived clone IGROV-1/Pt1 (with p53 mutations at codons 270 and 282). Clonogenic survival after UV-C irradiation showed that IGROV-1/Pt1 cells were approximately 2-fold more resistant to DNA damage than parental cells. Modulation of p53 protein levels, cell cycle arrest and apoptosis were induced in UV-irradiated IGROV-1 cells, but not in the p53-mutant cell line. Exposure to UV or cisplatin induced down-regulation of p53-replication protein A (RPA) interaction in parental, but not in IGROV-1/Pt1 cells. However, persistent binding of p53 to RPA did not affect the early steps of DNA repair. In fact, both UV-induced DNA incision and the recruitment of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) to DNA repair sites occurred to a comparable extent in p53-wild type and -mutant cell lines, although PCNA remained associated with chromatin for a longer period of time in IGROV-1/Pt1 cells. Global genome repair, as detected by immunoblot analysis of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers, was not significantly different in the two cell lines at 3 h after UV irradiation. In contrast, lesion removal at 24 h was markedly reduced in IGROV-1/Pt1 cells, being approximately 25% of the initial amount of damage, as compared with approximately 50% repair in parental cells. These results indicate that the presence of mutant p53 protein and its persistent interaction with RPA do not affect the early steps of nucleotide excision repair in IGROV-1/Pt1 cells. Thus, repair defects in p53-mutant ovarian carcinoma cells may be attributed to late events, possibly related to a reduced removal/recycling of PCNA at repair sites.
肿瘤抑制基因TP53在DNA修复尤其是核苷酸切除修复的调控中发挥重要作用。在人卵巢癌细胞系IGROV-1(表达野生型p53)及其衍生克隆IGROV-1/Pt1(密码子270和282处存在p53突变)经紫外线C(UV-C)照射后,研究了p53状态对该修复途径主要步骤效率的影响。UV-C照射后的克隆形成存活率表明,IGROV-1/Pt1细胞对DNA损伤的抗性比亲代细胞高约2倍。紫外线照射的IGROV-1细胞中诱导了p53蛋白水平的调节、细胞周期阻滞和凋亡,但在p53突变细胞系中未诱导。暴露于紫外线或顺铂会导致亲代细胞中p53与复制蛋白A(RPA)的相互作用下调,但在IGROV-1/Pt1细胞中不会。然而,p53与RPA的持续结合并不影响DNA修复的早期步骤。事实上,紫外线诱导的DNA切割以及增殖细胞核抗原(PCNA)募集到DNA修复位点在p53野生型和突变细胞系中发生的程度相当,尽管PCNA在IGROV-1/Pt1细胞中与染色质结合的时间更长。通过对环丁烷嘧啶二聚体的免疫印迹分析检测到的全基因组修复,在紫外线照射后3小时,两种细胞系中没有显著差异。相比之下,IGROV-1/Pt1细胞在24小时时损伤去除明显减少,约为初始损伤量的25%,而亲代细胞的修复率约为50%。这些结果表明,突变p53蛋白的存在及其与RPA的持续相互作用并不影响IGROV-1/Pt1细胞中核苷酸切除修复的早期步骤。因此,p53突变的卵巢癌细胞中的修复缺陷可能归因于后期事件,可能与修复位点处PCNA的去除/再循环减少有关。