» Articles » PMID: 20740008

Heterochromatin Silencing of P53 Target Genes by a Small Viral Protein

Overview
Journal Nature
Specialty Science
Date 2010 Aug 27
PMID 20740008
Citations 78
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The transcription factor p53 (also known as TP53) guards against tumour and virus replication and is inactivated in almost all cancers. p53-activated transcription of target genes is thought to be synonymous with the stabilization of p53 in response to oncogenes and DNA damage. During adenovirus replication, the degradation of p53 by E1B-55k is considered essential for p53 inactivation, and is the basis for p53-selective viral cancer therapies. Here we reveal a dominant epigenetic mechanism that silences p53-activated transcription, irrespective of p53 phosphorylation and stabilization. We show that another adenoviral protein, E4-ORF3, inactivates p53 independently of E1B-55k by forming a nuclear structure that induces de novo H3K9me3 heterochromatin formation at p53 target promoters, preventing p53-DNA binding. This suppressive nuclear web is highly selective in silencing p53 promoters and operates in the backdrop of global transcriptional changes that drive oncogenic replication. These findings are important for understanding how high levels of wild-type p53 might also be inactivated in cancer as well as the mechanisms that induce aberrant epigenetic silencing of tumour-suppressor loci. Our study changes the longstanding definition of how p53 is inactivated in adenovirus infection and provides key insights that could enable the development of true p53-selective oncolytic viral therapies.

Citing Articles

Molecular insights into type I interferon suppression and enhanced pathogenicity by species B human adenoviruses B7 and B14.

Graves D, Akkerman N, Fulham L, Helwer R, Pelka P mBio. 2024; 15(8):e0103824.

PMID: 38940561 PMC: 11323573. DOI: 10.1128/mbio.01038-24.


Expanding the adenovirus toolbox: reporter viruses for studying the dynamics of human adenovirus replication.

King C, Dodge M, MacNeil K, Tessier T, Mymryk J, Mehle A J Virol. 2024; 98(5):e0020724.

PMID: 38639487 PMC: 11092356. DOI: 10.1128/jvi.00207-24.


Virus-induced host genomic remodeling dysregulates gene expression, triggering tumorigenesis.

Dong W, Wang H, Li M, Li P, Ji S Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2024; 14:1359766.

PMID: 38572321 PMC: 10987825. DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2024.1359766.


(E1)levating COVID-19 vaccine efficiency with adenoviral E1 proteins.

Green D, Thomas P Sci Adv. 2022; 8(34):eade3956.

PMID: 36001673 PMC: 11325920. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.ade3956.


Metabolic Control by DNA Tumor Virus-Encoded Proteins.

Prusinkiewicz M, Mymryk J Pathogens. 2021; 10(5).

PMID: 34066504 PMC: 8148605. DOI: 10.3390/pathogens10050560.


References
1.
Kouzarides T . Chromatin modifications and their function. Cell. 2007; 128(4):693-705. DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2007.02.005. View

2.
Olsson A, Manzl C, Strasser A, Villunger A . How important are post-translational modifications in p53 for selectivity in target-gene transcription and tumour suppression?. Cell Death Differ. 2007; 14(9):1561-75. DOI: 10.1038/sj.cdd.4402196. View

3.
Linzer D, Levine A . Characterization of a 54K dalton cellular SV40 tumor antigen present in SV40-transformed cells and uninfected embryonal carcinoma cells. Cell. 1979; 17(1):43-52. DOI: 10.1016/0092-8674(79)90293-9. View

4.
Lakin N, Jackson S . Regulation of p53 in response to DNA damage. Oncogene. 2000; 18(53):7644-55. DOI: 10.1038/sj.onc.1203015. View

5.
Lane D, CRAWFORD L . T antigen is bound to a host protein in SV40-transformed cells. Nature. 1979; 278(5701):261-3. DOI: 10.1038/278261a0. View