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Caspase 2 is both required for p53-mediated apoptosis and downregulated by p53 in a p21-dependent manner

Nicole Baptiste-Okoh, Anthony M. Barsotti and Carol Prives

volume 7 | issue 9

1 May 2008
Pages: 1133 - 1138

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Upon treatment with some DNA damaging agents, human H1299 tumor-derived cells expressing inducible versions of wild-type or mutant p53 with inactive transactivation domain I (p53Q22/S23) undergo apoptosis. In cells expressing either version of p53, caspase 2 activation is required for release of cytochrome c and cell death. Furthermore, silencing of PIDD (a factor previously shown to be required for caspase 2 activation) by siRNA suppresses apoptosis by both wild-type p53 and p53Q22/S23. Despite the finding that caspase 2 is essential for DNA damage-facilitated, p53-mediated apoptosis, induction of wild-type p53 (with or without DNA damage) resulted in a reduction of caspase 2 mRNA and protein levels. In this study we sought to provide a mechanism for the negative regulation of caspase 2 by p53 as well as provide insight as to why p53 may repress a key mediator of p53-dependent apoptosis. Mechanistically, we show that DNA binding and/or transactivation domains of p53 are crucial for mediating transrepression. Further, expression of p21 (in p53-null cells inducibly expressing p21) is sufficient to mediate repression of caspase 2. Deletion of p21 or E2F-1 not only abrogated repression of caspase 2, but also stimulated the expression of caspase 2 above basal levels, implicating the requirement for an intact p21/Rb/E2F pathway in the down-regulation of caspase 2. As this p53/p21-dependent repression of caspase 2 can occur in the absence of DNA damage, caspase 2 repression does not simply seem to be a consequence of the apoptotic process. Down-regulation of caspase 2 levels by p53 may help to determine cell fate by preventing cell death when unnecessary.

Authors

Nicole Baptiste-Okoh

Columbia University; New York, NY

Anthony M. Barsotti

Columbia University; New York, NY

Carol Prives

Columbia University; New York, NY


Purchase article for $19

Subscribe to this journal for $129/year