| Literature DB >> 26904937 |
Liz J Valente1, Brandon J Aubrey2, Marco J Herold1, Gemma L Kelly1, Lina Happo1, Clare L Scott1, Andrea Newbold3, Ricky W Johnstone3, David C S Huang1, Lyubomir T Vassilev4, Andreas Strasser5.
Abstract
Nutlin3a is a small-molecule antagonist of MDM2 that promotes non-genotoxic activation of p53 through p53 protein stabilization and transactivation of p53 target genes. Nutlin3a is the forerunner of a class of cancer therapeutics that have reached clinical trials. Using transgenic and gene-targeted mouse models lacking the critical p53 target genes, p21, Puma, and Noxa, we found that only loss of PUMA conferred profound protection against Nutlin3a-induced killing in both non-transformed lymphoid cells and Eμ-Myc lymphomas in vitro and in vivo. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated targeting of the PUMA gene rendered human hematopoietic cancer cell lines markedly resistant to Nutlin3a-induced cell death. These results demonstrate that PUMA-mediated apoptosis, but not p21-mediated cell-cycle arrest or senescence, is a critical determinant of the therapeutic response to non-genotoxic p53 activation by Nutlin3a. Importantly, in human cancer, PUMA expression may predict patient responses to treatment with MDM2 antagonists.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26904937 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.01.059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423