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  • Title: The chimeric E2A-HLF transcription factor abrogates p53-induced apoptosis in myeloid leukemia cells.
    Author: Altura RA, Inukai T, Ashmun RA, Zambetti GP, Roussel MF, Look AT.
    Journal: Blood; 1998 Aug 15; 92(4):1397-405. PubMed ID: 9694729.
    Abstract:
    Leukemic lymphoblasts expressing the E2A-HLF oncoprotein possess wild-type p53 genes, but do not undergo apoptosis in response to DNA damage. Experimentally, E2A-HLF prevents apoptosis due to growth factor deprivation or gamma-irradiation in interleukin-3 (IL-3)-dependent murine pro-B cells. To directly test the chimeric protein's ability to abrogate p53-mediated cell death, we used mouse myeloid leukemia cells (M1p53tsval) that constitutively express a temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant p53 gene and undergo apoptosis when p53 assumes an active wild-type configuration. This effect is blocked by treatment with IL-6, which allows the cells to survive in culture despite wild-type p53 activation. We introduced E2A-HLF into M1p53tsval cells and found that they were resistant to p53-mediated apoptosis and that E2A-HLF effectively substituted for the survival functions of IL-6. The expression of p53-responsive genes such as p21 and Bax was upregulated normally, suggesting that E2A-HLF acts downstream of p53 to block execution of the p53-induced apoptotic program. NFIL3, a growth factor-regulated bZIP protein that binds to the same DNA-consensus site as E2A-HLF, delays apoptosis in IL-3-dependent pro-B cells deprived of growth factor. By contrast, in the present study, enforced expression of NFIL3 failed to protect M1p53tsval cells from p53-dependent apoptosis and actively antagonized the ability of IL-6 to rescue cells from that fate, consistent with its role as either a transcriptional repressor or activator, depending on the cell type in which it is expressed. We conclude that the E2A-HLF chimera abrogates p53-induced apoptosis in leukemic cells, possibly through the transcriptional modulation of cell death pathways that are activated by p53 in response to DNA damage.
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