Literature DB >> 20234190

Removing all obstacles: a critical role for p53 in promoting tissue renewal.

David W Schoppy1, Yaroslava Ruzankina, Eric J Brown.   

Abstract

Defects in DNA repair pathways or exposure to high levels of DNA damaging agents limit the renewal potential of adult tissues and accelerate the development of age-related degenerative pathologies. Many studies suggest these tissue homeostatic defects can result from the accumulation of DNA damage in tissue-specific stem cells. Although maintenance of genome integrity in progenitor cells is required for the renewal of adult tissues, recent studies have highlighted the importance of additional mechanisms that facilitate and direct the process of tissue regeneration. These reports indicate that the p53 tumor suppressor gene maintains adult tissue homeostasis and promotes tissue renewal by suppressing the accumulation of DNA-damaged cells. Without p53, tissue deterioration caused by the elimination of genome maintenance regulators (ATR, Hus1 or Terc) is exacerbated and, in some cases, leads to synthetic lethality at the organismal level. Importantly, the accumulation of highly damaged cells in multiple tissues appears to severely impede regeneration from undamaged progenitors, suggesting that p53-mediated removal of damaged cells is a prerequisite for efficient progenitor driven renewal. These findings argue that tissue homeostasis is governed not only by the intrinsic repopulating potential of competent progenitors, but also by mechanisms that limit the accumulation of defective cells and, thereby, promote compensatory regeneration. As discussed in this review, these findings advance our understanding of mechanisms that counter the effects of DNA damage at the tissue level and have important implications for the development of therapeutic approaches to combating age-related pathologies and p53-deficient malignancies.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20234190      PMCID: PMC2980577          DOI: 10.4161/cc.9.7.11194

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Cycle        ISSN: 1551-4005            Impact factor:   4.534


  71 in total

Review 1.  Blinded by the Light: The Growing Complexity of p53.

Authors:  Karen H Vousden; Carol Prives
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2009-05-01       Impact factor: 41.582

Review 2.  The intestinal stem cell.

Authors:  Nick Barker; Marc van de Wetering; Hans Clevers
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2008-07-15       Impact factor: 11.361

Review 3.  ATR: an essential regulator of genome integrity.

Authors:  Karlene A Cimprich; David Cortez
Journal:  Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2008-07-02       Impact factor: 94.444

Review 4.  ATR/Mec1: coordinating fork stability and repair.

Authors:  Anna M Friedel; Brietta L Pike; Susan M Gasser
Journal:  Curr Opin Cell Biol       Date:  2009-02-21       Impact factor: 8.382

Review 5.  Senescence-messaging secretome: SMS-ing cellular stress.

Authors:  Thomas Kuilman; Daniel S Peeper
Journal:  Nat Rev Cancer       Date:  2009-01-09       Impact factor: 60.716

Review 6.  Epidermal homeostasis: a balancing act of stem cells in the skin.

Authors:  Cédric Blanpain; Elaine Fuchs
Journal:  Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2009-02-11       Impact factor: 94.444

Review 7.  Immunogenic and tolerogenic cell death.

Authors:  Douglas R Green; Thomas Ferguson; Laurence Zitvogel; Guido Kroemer
Journal:  Nat Rev Immunol       Date:  2009-05       Impact factor: 53.106

8.  Senescence-associated secretory phenotypes reveal cell-nonautonomous functions of oncogenic RAS and the p53 tumor suppressor.

Authors:  Jean-Philippe Coppé; Christopher K Patil; Francis Rodier; Yu Sun; Denise P Muñoz; Joshua Goldstein; Peter S Nelson; Pierre-Yves Desprez; Judith Campisi
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2008-12-02       Impact factor: 8.029

9.  Senescence of activated stellate cells limits liver fibrosis.

Authors:  Valery Krizhanovsky; Monica Yon; Ross A Dickins; Stephen Hearn; Janelle Simon; Cornelius Miething; Herman Yee; Lars Zender; Scott W Lowe
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2008-08-22       Impact factor: 41.582

10.  Chk1 deficiency in the mouse small intestine results in p53-independent crypt death and subsequent intestinal compensation.

Authors:  K R Greenow; A R Clarke; R H Jones
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2009-01-26       Impact factor: 9.867

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  20 in total

1.  Rapamycin induces pluripotent genes associated with avoidance of replicative senescence.

Authors:  Tatiana V Pospelova; Tatiana V Bykova; Svetlana G Zubova; Natalia V Katolikova; Natalia M Yartzeva; Valery A Pospelov
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2013-12-02       Impact factor: 4.534

Review 2.  The Paradox of p53: What, How, and Why?

Authors:  Yael Aylon; Moshe Oren
Journal:  Cold Spring Harb Perspect Med       Date:  2016-10-03       Impact factor: 6.915

3.  Oncogenic stress sensitizes murine cancers to hypomorphic suppression of ATR.

Authors:  David W Schoppy; Ryan L Ragland; Oren Gilad; Nishita Shastri; Ashley A Peters; Matilde Murga; Oscar Fernandez-Capetillo; J Alan Diehl; Eric J Brown
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2011-12-01       Impact factor: 14.808

Review 4.  Targeting the p53 signaling pathway in cancer therapy - the promises, challenges and perils.

Authors:  Alexander H Stegh
Journal:  Expert Opin Ther Targets       Date:  2012-01-12       Impact factor: 6.902

5.  p53 prevents progression of nevi to melanoma predominantly through cell cycle regulation.

Authors:  Tamara Terzian; Enrique C Torchia; Daisy Dai; Steven E Robinson; Kazutoshi Murao; Regan A Stiegmann; Victoria Gonzalez; Glen M Boyle; Marianne B Powell; Pamela M Pollock; Guillermina Lozano; William A Robinson; Dennis R Roop; Neil F Box
Journal:  Pigment Cell Melanoma Res       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 4.693

6.  Epimorphic regeneration in mice is p53-independent.

Authors:  L Matthew Arthur; Renee M Demarest; Lise Clark; Dmitri Gourevitch; Kamila Bedelbaeva; Rhonda Anderson; Andrew Snyder; Anthony J Capobianco; Paul Lieberman; Lionel Feigenbaum; E Heber-Katz
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2010-09-21       Impact factor: 4.534

7.  p53 Enables metabolic fitness and self-renewal of nephron progenitor cells.

Authors:  Yuwen Li; Jiao Liu; Wencheng Li; Aaron Brown; Melody Baddoo; Marilyn Li; Thomas Carroll; Leif Oxburgh; Yumei Feng; Zubaida Saifudeen
Journal:  Development       Date:  2015-04-01       Impact factor: 6.868

8.  Loss of p53 exacerbates multiple myeloma phenotype by facilitating the reprogramming of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells to malignant plasma cells by MafB.

Authors:  Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Inés González-Herrero; María Begoña García Cenador; Francisco Javier García Criado; Isidro Sánchez-García
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2012-09-14       Impact factor: 4.534

Review 9.  Mechanisms that regulate stem cell aging and life span.

Authors:  Robert A J Signer; Sean J Morrison
Journal:  Cell Stem Cell       Date:  2013-02-07       Impact factor: 24.633

Review 10.  Role of Dietary Antioxidants in p53-Mediated Cancer Chemoprevention and Tumor Suppression.

Authors:  J P Jose Merlin; H P Vasantha Rupasinghe; Graham Dellaire; Kieran Murphy
Journal:  Oxid Med Cell Longev       Date:  2021-06-26       Impact factor: 6.543

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