Positive feedback between p53 and TRF2 during telomere-damage signalling and cellular senescence

Author:  ["Kaori Fujita","Izumi Horikawa","Abdul M. Mondal","Lisa M. Miller Jenkins","Ettore Appella","Borivoj Vojtesek","Jean-Christophe Bourdon","David P. Lane","Curtis C. Harris"]

Publication:  Nature Cell Biology

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:  Senescence   Telomeres   Tumour-suppressorproteins   Biological

Abstract

Uncapped telomeres activate a p53-mediated DNA damage response to elicit cellular senescence. In turn, p53 negatively modulates telomere capping by promoting ubiquitin-mediated degradation of the TRF2 shelterin component. The telomere-capping complex shelterin protects functional telomeres and prevents the initiation of unwanted DNA-damage-response pathways. At the end of cellular replicative lifespan, uncapped telomeres lose this protective mechanism and DNA-damage signalling pathways are triggered that activate p53 and thereby induce replicative senescence. Here, we identify a signalling pathway involving p53, Siah1 (a p53-inducible E3 ubiquitin ligase) and TRF2 (telomere repeat binding factor 2; a component of the shelterin complex). Endogenous Siah1 and TRF2 were upregulated and downregulated, respectively, during replicative senescence with activated p53. Experimental manipulation of p53 expression demonstrated that p53 induces Siah1 and represses TRF2 protein levels. The p53-dependent ubiquitylation and proteasomal degradation of TRF2 are attributed to the E3 ligase activity of Siah1. Knockdown of Siah1 stabilized TRF2 and delayed the onset of cellular replicative senescence, suggesting a role for Siah1 and TRF2 in p53-regulated senescence. This study reveals that p53, a downstream effector of telomere-initiated damage signalling, also functions upstream of the shelterin complex.

Cite this article

Fujita, K., Horikawa, I., Mondal, A. et al. Positive feedback between p53 and TRF2 during telomere-damage signalling and cellular senescence. Nat Cell Biol 12, 1205–1212 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncb2123

View full text

>> Full Text:   Positive feedback between p53 and TRF2 during telomere-damage signalling and cellular senescence

Competition amongst Eph receptors regulates contact inhibition of locomotion and invasiveness in pro

A kinase cascade leading to Rab11-FIP5 controls transcytosis of the polymeric immunoglobulin recepto