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Title: Distinct p53-mediated G1/S checkpoint responses in two NIH3T3 subclone cells following treatment with DNA-damaging agents. Author: Huang TS, Kuo ML, Shew JY, Chou YW, Yang WK. Journal: Oncogene; 1996 Aug 01; 13(3):625-32. PubMed ID: 8760304. Abstract: N3T3 and P-3T3 cells, originally isolated from a NIH3T3 cell clone on the basis of their negative and positive transformation by v-Abl, v-Src and Bcr-Abl, were previously found to show distinct cyclin activity changes following 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) treatment, which is anti-mitogenic for N-3T3 cells and mitogenic for P-3T3 cells. We have found in this study that, while the G1/S arrest and cell death induced by serum starvation and TPA treatment in N-3T3 cells did not involve p53-mediated checkpoint or apoptosis, N-3T3 and P-3T3 cells evidently responded differently in these aspects of cell cycle regulation to DNA-damaging agents, methylmethane sulfonate (MMS) and gamma-radiation. In N-3T3 cells, DNA damages elicit cell growth arrest at G1/S transition with concomitant accumulation of p53 and p53-inducible Waf1/Cip1 proteins and also signs of apoptosis such as DNA ladder patterns and apoptotic (subgenomic) peak in flow cytograph. Conversely, P-3T3 cells treated with the DNA-damaging agents showed no cell cycle interruption nor accumulation of p53 or Waf1/Cip1. However, both P-3T3 and N-3T3 cells showed the same p53 protein half-life of 40 min or less, the same wild-type p53 DNA sequence and the same co-immunoprecipitable cellular proteins in complexes with p53, suggesting that an alteration in a signal transduction pathway upstream of p53 might account for the evasion of p53-mediated G1 checkpoint in P-3T3 cells.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]