11 research outputs found

    The E1A-Associated p400 Protein Modulates Cell Fate Decisions by the Regulation of ROS Homeostasis

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    The p400 E1A-associated protein, which mediates H2A.Z incorporation at specific promoters, plays a major role in cell fate decisions: it promotes cell cycle progression and inhibits induction of apoptosis or senescence. Here, we show that p400 expression is required for the correct control of ROS metabolism. Depletion of p400 indeed increases intracellular ROS levels and causes the appearance of DNA damage, indicating that p400 maintains oxidative stress below a threshold at which DNA damages occur. Suppression of the DNA damage response using a siRNA against ATM inhibits the effects of p400 on cell cycle progression, apoptosis, or senescence, demonstrating the importance of ATM–dependent DDR pathways in cell fates control by p400. Finally, we show that these effects of p400 are dependent on direct transcriptional regulation of specific promoters and may also involve a positive feedback loop between oxidative stress and DNA breaks since we found that persistent DNA breaks are sufficient to increase ROS levels. Altogether, our results uncover an unexpected link between p400 and ROS metabolism and allow deciphering the molecular mechanisms largely responsible for cell proliferation control by p400

    Cleavage and Cytoplasmic Relocalization of Histone Deacetylase 3 Are Important for Apoptosis Progression

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    The apoptotic process is accompanied by major changes in chromatin structure and gene expression. The apoptotic genetic program is progressively set up with the inhibition of antiapoptotic genes and the activation of proapoptotic ones. Here, we show that the histone deacetylase 3 (HDAC-3), which is a known corepressor of many proapoptotic genes, is subjected to proteolytic cleavage during apoptosis in a cell type- and species-independent manner. This cleavage is caspase dependent and leads to the loss of the C-terminal part of HDAC-3. The cleaved form of HDAC-3 accumulates in the cytoplasm. Furthermore, we found that forced nuclear localization of HDAC-3 decreases the efficiency of apoptosis induction, indicating that HDAC-3 cytoplasmic relocalization is important for the apoptotic process. Finally, we observed that HDAC-3 cleavage allowed increased histone acetylation and transcriptional activation on a proapoptotic HDAC-3-target gene, the Fas-encoding gene. Altogether, our results thus indicate that HDAC-3 cleavage is crucial for efficient apoptosis induction because it allows the activation of some proapoptotic genes during apoptosis progression

    Role of the histone acetyl transferase Tip60 in the p53 pathway

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    The histone acetyl transferase Tip60 (HTATIP) shares many properties with the tumor suppressor p53 (TP53). Both proteins are involved in the cellular response to DNA damage, are subjected to proteasomal digestion following Mdm2-mediated ubiquitination, and accumulate after UV irradiation. We found here that knock-down of Tip60 affects the p53-dependent response following actinomycin D treatment, most likely because it inhibits p21 (CDKN1A) accumulation. Moreover, Tip60 is required for p53 to activate the endogenous p21 promoter, suggesting that it functions as a p53 co-activator. However, we also found that knock-down of Tip60 increases the turnover rate of p53 under normal growth conditions. Tip60 interferes with Mdm2-mediated degradation of p53, probably because it affects its subcellular localization. Taken together, our results suggest that Tip60 plays a double role in the p53 pathway: under normal growth conditions, Tip60 contributes to maintain a basal pool of p53 by interfering with its degradation; following DNA damage, Tip60 functions as p53 co-activator. That these two distinct roles are linked during the p53-dependent response is an attractive hypothesis
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