| Literature DB >> 29065514 |
M Reza Saadatzadeh1,2,3, Adily N Elmi4, Pankita H Pandya5, Khadijeh Bijangi-Vishehsaraei6, Jixin Ding7,8,9, Christopher W Stamatkin10,11, Aaron A Cohen-Gadol12, Karen E Pollok13,14,15.
Abstract
In cancer, the mouse double minute 2 (MDM2) is an oncoprotein that contributes to the promotion of cell growth, survival, invasion, and therapeutic resistance. The impact of MDM2 on cell survival versus cell death is complex and dependent on levels of MDM2 isoforms, p53 status, and cellular context. Extensive investigations have demonstrated that MDM2 protein-protein interactions with p53 and other p53 family members (p63 and p73) block their ability to function as transcription factors that regulate cell growth and survival. Upon genotoxic insults, a dynamic and intricately regulated DNA damage response circuitry is activated leading to release of p53 from MDM2 and activation of cell cycle arrest. What ensues following DNA damage, depends on the extent of DNA damage and if the cell has sufficient DNA repair capacity. The well-known auto-regulatory loop between p53-MDM2 provides an additional layer of control as the cell either repairs DNA damage and survives (i.e., MDM2 re-engages with p53), or undergoes cell death (i.e., MDM2 does not re-engage p53). Furthermore, the decision to live or die is also influenced by chromatin-localized MDM2 which directly interacts with the Mre11-Rad50-Nbs1 complex and inhibits DNA damage-sensing giving rise to the potential for increased genome instability and cellular transformation.Entities:
Keywords: DNA damage; MDM2; genome instability; p53
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29065514 PMCID: PMC5666895 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18102216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Illustrative Representation of MDM2-FL and MDM2 Isoforms (MDM2-A, MDM2-B, and MDM2-C). Adapted and modified from Huun et al. [5]. NES = nuclear export signal, NoLS = nucleolar localization signal, and NLS = nuclear localization signal.
Presence of MDM2 isoforms and p53 status [5,10,17,23].
| MDM2 Isoform | MDM2-A | MDM2-B | MDM2-C |
|---|---|---|---|
| MDM2-A transgenic mice; MDM2-A expressing transgenic mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs); and, MDM2-A retrovirally transduced wildtype MEFs | Human lung cancer and colorectal cancer cell lines | Human breast cancer cell lines; human liposarcoma, breast carcinoma tissues, and osteosarcoma cells | |
| Increased expression of MDM2-A (75 kDa) in human cancer cells and/or tissues such as breast cancer and Hodgkin’s Lymphoma | Most common MDM2 isoform. Increased expression of MDM2-B (48 kDa) observed in in human cancers and/or tissues such as colorectal cancer, breast cancer, and Hodgkin’s Lymphoma | Increased expression of MDM2-C (85 kDa) in human cancer cells and/or tissues of breast cancer, osteosarcoma, and chronic myelogenous leukemia | |
| Accumulation of wildtype p53 activity | Accumulation of wildtype and mutant p53 | p53 independent transformation function; does not function by inhibiting p53 transcriptional activity and does not show role in p53 degradation pathway | |
| MDM2-A lacks wildtype p53 binding region but binds and sequesters FL-MDM2 to prevent FL-MDM2-dependent-degradation of wildtype p53 | MDM2-B lacks the wildtype p53 binding domains but can interact with FL- MDM2 to prevent degradation of mutant p53 | p53-independent function for cell proliferation; MDM2-C lacks p53 binding domain but exact mechanism requires further investigation |
Figure 2Regulation of p53 by MDM2 and MDMX following DNA damage. (A) In the absence of DNA damage, p53 levels and activation are tightly controlled by the MDM2-MDMX complex, and (B) upstream kinases act as sensors of DNA damage to regulate MDM2, MDMX, and p53; (C) Upon resolution of DNA damage, the p53/MDM2 feedback loop controls p53 levels. Ub = ubiquitin, P = phosphorylation site (purple arrow = phosphorylation by ATM; red arrow = phosphorylation by c-Abl; black = phosphorylation by CHK2); S = serine, and T = tyrosine.
Figure 3Regulation of the MDM2-signaling network by the pro-survival kinase AKT. AKT-mediated phosphorylation of Mdm2 promotes Mdm2 entry into the nucleus and enhances its ubiquitination-promoting function which leads to p53 inactivation, inhibition of apoptosis, and increased survival. Phosphorylation of MDMX by AKT stabilizes MDM2 E3-ligase activity.
MDM2 regulators and functional outcome [45,53,69,73,74,75,76,77,78,79,80].
| Effectors of MDM2 | Effect on MDM2 Function |
|---|---|
| PTEN | Transcriptional inhibition |
| NF-κB | Transcriptional activation |
| Raf | Transcriptional activation |
| Smad3/4 | Transcriptional activation |
| E2F1 | Transcriptional inhibition |
| ATM | MDM2 phosphorylation at S394 and/or S395 is required for p53 accumulation, stabilization and activation |
| c-AbI | Tyrosine phosphorylation of MDM2 facilitates MDM2-MDMX complex formation and regulates p53 stabilization |
| AKT | Phosphorylation of MDM2 at residues S166 and S188 inhibits its self-ubiquitination and at S186 Akt enhances the ubiquitination-promoting function of MDM2 which results in reduction of p53 protein |
| Daxx | Stabilizes; enhances interaction between Mdm2 & Hausp |
| Cyclin G | Dephosphorylation of Mdm2 |
| MdmX | Inhibits auto-ubiquitination of MDM2 E3 ligase activity |
| Elf4/Mef | Transcriptional activation |
| p19ras | Blocks Mdm2-p73 interaction |
| Seladin-1 | Blocks Mdm2-p53 interaction |
| RPS3/S7/S27 | Blocks Mdm2-p53 interaction |
| L5/L11/L23/L26 | Blocks Mdm2 ubiquitination of p53 |
| p38 | p300 binds to p53 and MDM2; there is evidence that p38 can phosphorylate p300 and increase capacity of MDM2 to promote p300 degradation. |
| Cyclin a-CDK complexes | phosphorylate MDM2 and affect interaction of MDM2 with proteins |
| p14ARF | E3 ligase inhibition in the context of MDM2-p53 interactionsE3 ligase activation in the context of MDM2-MDMX interactions |
| MTBP | Binds to MDM2 and Induces a G1 Arrest |
PTEN = phosphatase and tensin homolog; NF-κB = nuclear factor κ-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; AKT = Protein kinase B is a serine/threonine-specific protein kinase; MTBP = MDM2-binding protein.
Downstream targets of MDM2 [14,56,81].
| Targets of MDM2 | Result of Interaction with MDM2 |
|---|---|
| p53 | Decreases p53 activity |
| p73 | Decreases p53 activity |
| p63 | Decreases p53 activity |
| HDAC | Mdm2-HDAC interaction facilitates p53 acetylation |
| Nbs1 | Inhibition of double strand break repair |
| β2 Androgen receptor | Ubiquitination and degradation via Akt/Mdm2 |
| RB | Inhibits RB binding to E2F1 |
| ATF3 | Ubiquitination and degradation |
| E-cadherin | Ubiquitination and degradation |
| NF-κB/p65 | MDM2 induces NF-κB/p65 expression transcriptionally through Sp1-binding sites |
| Chk2 | Ubiquitination and degradation |
| NUMB | Alters subcellular localization; Ubiquitination and degradation |
HDAC = Histone deacetylases; RB = retinoblastoma; E-Cadherin = A transmembrane protein that links plasma membranes of adjacent cells together in a Ca2+-dependent manner; aids in maintaining the rigidity of the cell layer; NF-κB/p65 = a subunit of NF-κB transcription complex; NUMB = Endocytic Adaptor Protein.
Figure 4Model of inhibition of DNA break repair by Mdm2. Double-strand break induced by irradiation is detected by the M/R/N complex. ATM is recruited to the DNA-strand break and activated by auto-phosphorylation. In turn, activated ATM phosphorylates Nbs1, histone H2AX, p53, and Mdm2. MDM2 delays the early phosphorylation process, which is necessary for DNA double-strand break repair, causing inefficient DNA break repair and if not repaired could lead to genomic instability and tumorigenesis (Modified from Bouska and Eischen [56,84,93]). Inhibition = Activation = .
List of MDM2-p53 inhibitors in previous or current clinical trials are listed MDM2 Inhibitors in Clinical Trials [99].
| Compound Developer | Clinical Trial Phase and Status | References |
|---|---|---|
| RO5045337/RG7112 | phase I | [ |
| MDM2 antagonist | Completed | |
| (Roche) | ||
| RO5503781/RG7388/Idasanutlin | phase I | [ |
| MDM2 antagonist | Completed | |
| (Roche) | ||
| AMG232 | phase I | [ |
| MDM2 antagonist | Completed | |
| (Amgen) | ||
| CGM097 | phase I | [ |
| MDM2 antagonist | Ongoing but not recruiting | |
| (Novartis) | ||
| DS-3032b/Benzodiazepinedione | phase I | [ |
| MDM2 antagonist | Recruiting participants | |
| (Daiichi Sankyo) | ||
| SAR405838 | phase I | [ |
| MDM2 antagonist | Completed | |
| (Sanofi S.A.) | ||
| MK-8242/SCH 900242 | phase I | [ |
| MDM2 antagonist | Terminated | |
| (Merck) | ||
| ALRN-6924 | Phase I/2a | [ |
| MDM2/MDMX dual antagonist | Ongoing recruiting | |
| (Aileron Therapeutics) |