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AATF/Che-1 acts as a phosphorylation-dependent molecular modulator to repress p53-driven apoptosis

Authors :
Hoepker, Katja
Hagmann, Henning
Khurshid, Safiya
Chen, Shuhua
Hasskamp, Pia
Seeger-Nukpezah, Tamina
Schilberg, Katharina
Heukamp, Lukas
Lamkemeyer, Tobias
Sos, Martin L.
Thomas, Roman K.
Lowery, Drew
Roels, Frederik
Fischer, Matthias
Liebau, Max C.
Resch, Ulrike
Kisner, Tuelay
Roether, Fabian
Bartram, Malte P.
Mueller, Roman Ulrich
Fabretti, Francesca
Kurschat, Peter
Schumacher, Bjoern
Gaestel, Matthias
Medema, Rene H.
Yaffe, Michael B.
Schermer, Bernhard
Reinhardt, H. Christian
Benzing, Thomas
Hoepker, Katja
Hagmann, Henning
Khurshid, Safiya
Chen, Shuhua
Hasskamp, Pia
Seeger-Nukpezah, Tamina
Schilberg, Katharina
Heukamp, Lukas
Lamkemeyer, Tobias
Sos, Martin L.
Thomas, Roman K.
Lowery, Drew
Roels, Frederik
Fischer, Matthias
Liebau, Max C.
Resch, Ulrike
Kisner, Tuelay
Roether, Fabian
Bartram, Malte P.
Mueller, Roman Ulrich
Fabretti, Francesca
Kurschat, Peter
Schumacher, Bjoern
Gaestel, Matthias
Medema, Rene H.
Yaffe, Michael B.
Schermer, Bernhard
Reinhardt, H. Christian
Benzing, Thomas
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Following genotoxic stress, cells activate a complex signalling network to arrest the cell cycle and initiate DNA repair or apoptosis. The tumour suppressor p53 lies at the heart of this DNA damage response. However, it remains incompletely understood, which signalling molecules dictate the choice between these different cellular outcomes. Here, we identify the transcriptional regulator apoptosis-antagonizing transcription factor (AATF)/Che-1 as a critical regulator of the cellular outcome of the p53 response. Upon genotoxic stress, AATF is phosphorylated by the checkpoint kinase MK2. Phosphorylation results in the release of AATF from cytoplasmic MRLC3 and subsequent nuclear translocation where AATF binds to the PUMA, BAX and BAK promoter regions to repress p53-driven expression of these pro-apoptotic genes. In xenograft experiments, mice exhibit a dramatically enhanced response of AATF-depleted tumours following genotoxic chemotherapy with adriamycin. The exogenous expression of a phospho-mimicking AATF point mutant results in marked adriamycin resistance in vivo. Nuclear AATF enrichment appears to be selected for in p53-proficient endometrial cancers. Furthermore, focal copy number gains at the AATF locus in neuroblastoma, which is known to be almost exclusively p53-proficient, correlate with an adverse prognosis and reduced overall survival. These data identify the p38/MK2/AATF signalling module as a critical repressor of p53-driven apoptosis and commend this pathway as a target for DNA damage-sensitizing therapeutic regimens. The EMBO Journal (2012) 31, 3961-3975. doi:10.1038/emboj.2012.236; Published online 21 August 2012

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1252543995
Document Type :
Electronic Resource