| Literature DB >> 29298131 |
Kaitlyn Beyfuss1, David A Hood1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: p53 is a tumor suppressor protein involved in regulating a wide array of signaling pathways. The role of p53 in the cell is determined by the type of imposed oxidative stress, its intensity and duration. The last decade of research has unravelled a dual nature in the function of p53 in mediating the oxidative stress burden. However, this is dependent on the specific properties of the applied stress and thus requires further analysis.Entities:
Keywords: Reactive oxygen species; antioxidant enzymes; apoptosis; chemical agents; diet; exercise; mitochondria; transcription
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29298131 PMCID: PMC6748683 DOI: 10.1080/13510002.2017.1416773
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Redox Rep ISSN: 1351-0002 Impact factor: 4.412
Inclusion and exclusion criteria. At the various stages of study analysis for inclusion in review, papers were included and excluded based on the above criteria. At the point of study inclusion, some papers satisfied the requirement of more than one form of oxidative stress.
| Stage | Stage description | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Journal title analysis | Key words: p53, skeletal muscle Form of oxidative stress | Key words: Human, cancer/tumour/adenoma/sarcoma, review, tissues (other than skeletal muscle) Different language Methodology paper |
| 2 | Abstract analysis | p53 signaling activation Imposed oxidative stress Skeletal muscle tissue Animal or cell model | Tissues/cells (other than skeletal muscle or myoblasts) Human Model Cancer cells/ tissues infected with cancer Review or methods paper No abstract available (retraction of paper) |
| 3 | Full text analysis | p53 signaling activation Imposed oxidative stress Skeletal muscle tissue Animal or cell model Oxidative stress (exercise, tissue manipulation, chemical and medicinal agents, diet modification, hypoxia, irradiation) | Full text is unavailable No form of imposed oxidative stress |
Figure 1.Layout of systematic analysis for literature inclusion. Various databases were utilized to identify all studies published between 1990 and 2017 in which an animal or cell culture models under imposed oxidative stress were assessed to examine the effects on skeletal muscle and downstream proteomic markers. We screened 578 articles published in the English language; 38 were eligible for critical appraisal resulting in a total of 31 articles to be included in this review.
Literature compiled on oxidative stress imposed through various exercise modalities.
| Publication information (Ref#) | Research model | Age at start (weeks) | Stress intensity | Length of stress | p53 expression (residue modification) | p53 cellular localization | Regulation of signaling pathways with stress | Signaling pathway(s) activated | Path model | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mRNA | Protein | |||||||||
| Acute exercise programs | ||||||||||
| Saleem, Hood, J Physiol, 2013 | (C57Bl/6J p53 KO and WT mice | 12 | 15 m/min for 90 min (±3 h recovery) | 90 min | ↓ p53 mRNA (w/acute and acute + recovery) | ↑ p-p53 @ ser15 in SS and IMF mito | ↑ PGC-1 | n/a | Mitochondrial biogenesis, mtDNA integrity (tfam-p53) | n/a |
| Saleem et al., Am J Physiol Cell Physiol, 2014 [ | C57BL/6J p53 KO and WT mice | 8 | 15 m/min for 90 min (±3 h recovery) | 90 min | n/a | n/a | ↑ PGC-1 | ↑ p-p38 MAPK@ tyr180, ↑p-AMPK @ tyr172, ↑p-CaMKII @ tyr286, ↑LC3-II (mito) | Mitochondrial biogenesis, autophagy | n/a |
| Chronic exercise programs | ||||||||||
| Qi et al., Free Radic Biol Med, 2011 [ | Goto-Kakizaki rats | 10–12 | Progressive: 20 m/min @ 30 min → 1 h | 8 weeks (6 days/week) | ↓ p53 protein | n/a | ↓TIGAR, ↑ mtDNA (ATPase + CytB) | ↓ TIGAR, ↑ COX II, ↑ GSH, ↑ GSH:GSSG | Insulin resistance, glycolysis, mitochondrial biogenesis | Non-obese type II diabetes |
| Safdar et al., Skelet Muscle, 2016 [ | C57Bl/6J PolG WT and KO, p53 MSKO, and PolG-p53 MSKO mice | 12 | 15 m/min @ 45 min | 26 weeks (3 days/week) | No change | ↓ Nuclear p53 | ↑ mtDNA copy number | ↑ SOD2, ↑ catalase, ↑ Tfam, ↑ ERR | Antioxidant, mitochondrial biogenesis | n/a |
| Park et al., Circ Res, 2009 [ | C57BL/6J p53 KO and WT and HT mice | 8–12 | Progressive: 10 m/min @ 40 min → 14 m/min @ 90 min) | 5 weeks (5 days/week) | n/a | n/a | ↑ Tfam, ↑ mtDNA copy number | ↑ SDH | Mitochondrial biogenesis, glycolytic vs. oxidative respiration | n/a |
| Saleem et al., Physiol Genomics, 2009 [ | C57BI/6J p53 KO and WT mice | 9–12 | Voluntary wheel running program; acute in situ stimulation (1 and 3 TPS) | 6–8 weeks | ↑ p-p53 @ ser15 (acute) | n/a | n/a | ↑ COX (chronic), ↑ p-AMPK @ tyr172 + ↑ p-p38 @ tyr180 (acute) | Mitochondrial biogenesis | n/a |
| Siu, Always, J Appl Physiol, 2005 [ | (Japanese Coturnix quails | 8 and 208 | Stretch-overload model (12% body weight over the left humeral-ulnar joint for joint extension) | 7 and 21 days | n/a | ↑ Nuclear p53 | n/a | ↑ Id2 (nuclear) (7 days in PAT; 7 and 21 days in ALD) | Hypertrophy | n/a |
Notes: Literature (seven studies) was grouped by acute (two studies) or chronic (five studies) exercise. Arrows indicate whether markers regulated by this form of stress increased (↑) or decreased (↓) in expression and/or activation. If a WT vs. KO model is employed, only the results from the WT group are indicated. A caveat to this is the study published by Safdar et al., Skelet Muscle, 2016 which examines exercise in Polg1 MSKO models only. Various time measurements are indicated for the length of imposed stress. WT: wildtype; KO: knockout; HT: heterozygous; MSKO: muscle-specific KO; mito: mitochondria; SS: subsarcolemmal; IMF: intermyofibrillar; PAT: patagialis; ADL: anterior latissimus dorsi.
Literature compiled on oxidative stress imposed through various dietary modifications.
| Publication information (Ref#) | Research model | Age at start (weeks) | Stress intensity | Length of stress | p53 expression (residue modification) | p53 cellular localization | Regulation of signaling pathways with stress | Signaling pathway(s) activated | Path model | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mRNA | Protein | |||||||||
| Diet modification | ||||||||||
| Nakahara et al., Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab, 2003 [ | Wistar rats | 6–7 | (1) Chronic alcohol (35% total dietary energy) + restriction | (1) 6–7 weeks alcohol | 1) n/a | n/a | (1) ↑ c-myc (F + alcohol), (2)↑ c-myc (alcohol and/or starvation) | n/a | Proto-oncogenic activation, pre-apoptotic effect | Chronic alcohol exposure |
| Yokoyama et al., Cell Rep, 2014 [ | C57BL/6 Tie2-Cre w/ p53, p53 + eNOS, Mdm4 mice | 4 | HF/HS | 8 weeks | ↑ p53 protein | n/a | ↑Cdh5, ↑ Kdr, ↓ mtDNA content | ↑ Insulin-induced p-Akt @ ser473, ↓p-eNOS @ser1177, ↓ PGC-1 | Endothelial cell expression, glucose metabolism, mitochondrial biogenesis | Insulin resistance + obesity |
| Dietary restriction | ||||||||||
| Edwards et al., BMC Genomics, 2007 [ | C57BL/6NHsd mice | 6–7 | 26% <normal diet (∼98 kcal/week) | 130 weeks | ↓ p53 mRNA | n/a | ↓ MYOD1, ↓PLAGL1, ↓p21, ↓IGF-BP3, ↓Krt15 mcII, ↓ PERP, ↓sestrin 1, ↓PTEN, ↓ PEG3, ↓ RB1, ↑Bcl6 B cell leukemia, ↑ cyclin G1, ↑ mdm2, ↓ bbc3/puma, ↓ pmaip1/noxa, ↓tnfrsf10b/ killer/dr5, ↓bok | ↓ p21, ↓ Gadd45a | cellular senescence, apoptosis | n/a |
| Assaily et al., Mol Cell, 2011 [ | C2C12 myoblasts w/Lpin1, p53 KO | n/a | 1 or 0 mM glucose + 24 h fasting | 2 h | ↑p53 and p-p53 @ ser18 | ↑53BP1 nuclear | ↑ Lpin1 | ↑ p-AMPK @ Thr172, ↑ p-ACC @ ser79, ↑p-ATM @ ser1987, ↑ p-H2AX | Glycolysis, pentose phosphate pathway, fatty acid oxidation | n/a |
| Fasting/complete food withdrawal | ||||||||||
| Schupp et al., BMC Genomics, 2013 [ | C57B1/6J mice | 10–12 | `Withdrawn food | Timecourse: 0, 3, 6, 12, 24, 48 h | ↑ p53 mRNA | n/a | ↑ Pkc1 (3–48 h), ↑ G6P (3–20 h), ↑ Pcx (48 h), ↑Gyk (12–24 h), ↑Hmgcs2 (12–48 h), ↑ Fgf21 (24 h), ↑ Ppargc1a (24–48 h), ↑Ppara (3 + 24 h), ↑ Cdkn1a, ↑Ses1 + 2, ↑ Lpin1, ↓ Srebf1 + 2, ↓ Acss2, ↓ Acaca, ↓ Fasn, ↓ Scd1 + 2, ↑ Ddit4 (12–48 h) | ↑ AMPK, ↓ mTORC1, ↓ Ppargc1a | Fatty acid oxidation, cholesterol biosynthesis | n/a |
| Aquilano et al., Antioxid Redox Signal, 2013 [ | C57/BL/6J and CDI mice | 5 | Withdrawn food | 24 h | ↑ p53 protein | ↑ p53 nuclear + ↑ binding PGC-1 | ↑ PGC-1 | ↓ GSH, ↑ PGC-1 | Antioxidant | n/a |
Notes: Literature (six studies) was grouped by diet modification (two studies), dietary restriction (two studies), or fasting/complete food withdrawal (two studies). Arrows indicate whether markers regulated by this form of stress increased (↑) or decreased (↓) in expression and/or activation. If a WT vs. KO model is employed, only the results from the WT group are indicated. Various time measurements are indicated for the length of imposed stress. KO: knockout; Cre: creatine; HF/HS: high fat/high sucrose; F: fasting; CR: caloric restriction.
Literature compiled on oxidative stress imposed through various modalities of tissue manipulation.
| Publication information (Ref#) | Research model | Age at start (weeks) | Stress intensity | Length of stress | p53 expression (residue modification) | p53 cellular localization | Regulation of signaling pathways with stress | Signaling pathway(s) activated | Path model | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mRNA | Protein | |||||||||
| Morimoto et al., J Atheroscler Thromb, 2011 [ | KK/Ay and C57Bl/6J mice | 9 | Unilateral hindlimb ischemia surgery | 2 weeks | ↑ p53 protein | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | Type II diabetes |
| Schwarzkopf et al., Genes Dev, 2006 [ | BALB/c + C57BL/6 p53 KO and WT mice | 7 | C26 tumor graft and tissue crush injury | 3 weeks | ↑ p53protein | n/a | ↑ Atrogin-1 | ↑ PWI | fiber regeneration, atrophy | cachexia, cancer |
| Fox et al., Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab, 2014 [ | C57B1/6J p53 MSKO, ATF4 MSKO, and p53/ATF4 MSKO mice | 8–12 | Unilateral hindlimb immobilization (ankle joint + TA) | Timecourse: 1–3 days | ↑ p53 protein (1–3 days) | n/a | ↑ Gadd45a, ↑ histone deacetylase 4, ↑muscle RING finger, ↑ muscle atrophy F-box/atrogin-1, ↑ p21, ↑1-subunit of the nicotinic | ↑ p21 | Atrophy, cellular senescence | Immobility |
| White et al., Int J Dev Biol, 2002 [ | C57BL/6J p53 KO and WT mice | 2–32 | Autographs of EDL over TA muscles and tissue crush injury | 2–14 days grafting; 3, 5, 7, 10, 14 days grafting and 7 and 14 days crush injury | n/a | n/a | n/a | ↑ Desmin (day 5) | regeneration, atrophy | muscle injury |
| Nakazawa et al., PLOS ONE, 2017 [ | C57BL/6 and iNOS KO mice | 8 | Abdominal full-thickness burn injury (30% of total body surface area) | 6 s abdominal immersion and both sides of the flank for 4 s in 80˚C water; Timecourse: @ 0, 1, 3, 7 days | ↑acetyl – p53 @ Lys379 (1-3 days) | n/a | ↑ 1L-1 | ↑ iNOS (3 days), ↑acetyl – p65 @ Lys 310 (3 days), ↑p-p65 @S276 + S311 (3 days), ↓ eNOS (3 days), ↑ S-NO SIRT1 (3 days), ↑ caspase 3 (3 days), ↑HMGB1 (3 days) | Atrophy, inflammation, apoptosis | Burn |
Notes: Literature (five studies) on various modalities was not grouped as each model was very different. Arrows indicate whether markers regulated by this form of stress increased (↑) or decreased (↓) in expression and/or activation. If a WT vs. KO model is employed, only the results from the WT group are indicated. Various time measurements are indicated for the length of imposed stress. WT: wildtype; KO: knockout; MSKO: muscle-specific KO; EDL: extensor digitorum longus; TA: tibialis anterior.
Literature compiled on oxidative stress imposed through oxygen deprivation.
| Publication information (Ref #) | Research model | Age at start (weeks) | Stress intensity | Length of stress | p53 expression (residue modification) | p53 cellular localization | Regulation of signaling pathways with stress | Signaling pathway(s) activated | Path model | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mRNA | Protein | |||||||||
| Wang et al., J Biol Chem, 2015 [ | Primary myoblasts | n/a | Hypoxia (1% O2) | 2.5 min each day for 2 days | ↑ p53 mRNA and protein | n/a | ↑ Bhlhe40, ↑ Bhlhe41 | ↑ Bhlhe40, ↓ MF20+, ↓ Myog | Cell cycle (H1F1 | Hypoxia |
| Zhang et al., Gene,2013 [ | T.S. Elegans | Adult | Hypoxia (dechlorinated water bubbled with N2 gas for 1 h) | 5 or 20 h | ↑ p53 protein (20 h) | ↑ p53 nucleus (20 h) | ↑ 14-3-3o (5 h), ↑Gadd45a (5 h), ↓ Pgm (5 + 20 h), ↑ miR-34a (20 h) | n/a | Cell cycle regulation and senescence | Hypoxia |
Notes: Literature (two studies) was reviewed and analyzed. Arrows indicate whether markers regulated by this form of stress increased (↑) or decreased (↓) in expression and/or activation. Various time measurements are indicated for the length of imposed stress. T.S. elegans: Trachemys scripta elegans.
Literature compiled on oxidative stress imposed through irradiation.
| Publication information (Ref #) | Research model | Age at start (weeks) | Stress intensity | Length of stress | p53 expression | p53 cellular localization | Regulation of signaling pathways with stress | Signaling | Path model | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mRNA | Protein | |||||||||
| Yang et al., Cell Death, 2015 [ | C2C12 myoblasts | n/a | Irradiation (5-Gy) | One-time; timecourse: 2, 6, 12, 24, 48, 72, 96 h post-IR | ↑p53 (6 h) | ↑ p53 nuclear (↑ myogenin – 2560 binding @ 6 h), ↓ 48 h (for MyHC, myogenin, H3K27Ac) | ↓ Myogenin (48–96 h), ↓H3K27Ac | ↓ MyHC | Myogenic repression, differentiation | n/a |
| Feng et al., Cancer Res, 2007 [ | C57BL/6J p53 KO and WT | 4–6 | Irradiation (5 Gy) | 8 and 24 h | No change | n/a | ↑ TSC2, ↑ PTEN, ↑IGF-BP3, ↑p21, ↑Mdm2, ↑ Pirh2, ↑Cop1, ↑ CyclinG1, ↑Wip1 (8 + 24 h) | n/a | IGF-1-AKT-mTOR | Cancer cell growth |
Notes: Literature (two studies) was reviewed and analyzed. Arrows indicate whether markers regulated by this form of stress increased (↑) or decreased (↓) in expression and/or activation. If a WT vs. KO model is employed, only the results from the WT group are indicated. Various time measurements are indicated for the length of imposed stress. KO: knockout; WT: wildtype; IR: irradiation; Gy: Gray.
Literature compiled on oxidative stress imposed through various types of chemical or medicinal oxidizing agents.
| Publication information (Ref #) | Research model | Age at start (weeks) | Stress intensity | Length of stress | p53 expression (residue modification) | p53 cellular localization | Regulation of signaling pathways with stress | Signaling pathway(s) activated | Path model | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mRNA | Protein | |||||||||
| Direct oxidizing agents | ||||||||||
| Pronsato et al., Steroids, 2016 [ | C2C12 myoblasts | n/a | 1 mM H2O2 ± 10−9 M TST | 60 min TST + Timecourse H2O2: 4 h; 15 min, 30 min, 1–4 h | ↑ p-p53 @ ser15 (1–2 h; TST ↓ p-p53 | ↑ Nuclear p-p53 (1–2 h) | ↑ DNA fragmentation (70%), TST ↑ DNA fragmentation (44%) @ 4 h, ↑ p66Shc (1.5 h) | ↑ p-p66Shc @ ser36 (1–2 h) mito (TST ↓ p-p66shc), ↑ p-JNK1/2 @ Tyr185 + Thr183 (1–4 h) TST ↓ p-JNK), ↑p-PKC | Apoptosis | Sarcopenia |
| Hori et al., PLoS One, 2013 [ | C2C12 myoblasts w/p53, SIRT1 KO | n/a | 10 or 30 µM RSV for 3 hours + 50 µM AA or 50 µM H2O2 | 3 h RSV | ↑ acetyl-p53 @ Lys379 (AA) ↓ with RSV | n/a | n/a | ↑caspase 3 (AA or H2O2)↓ w/ RSV, ↑ SOD2 (w/RSV), ↓ FOXO1/ FOXO3a/ FOXO4 (AA) | Apoptosis, antioxidant | n/a |
| Liu et al., Biochem Biophys Res Commun, 2007 [ | C2C12 myoblasts with | n/a | 0.5 mmol/L H2O2 in 10 ml | 6, 12, 24 h | ↑ p53 protein | ↑p53/ | n/a | n/a | Apoptosis | n/a |
| Le Roux et al., Nat Commun, 2015 [ | Tg:Pax7CT2 (Numb KO, p53 KO, Numb/p53 KO) w/ 4-OHT; satellite cells | n/a | 20 µL (10 mg/ml) snake venom toxin injection or 10 mM cardiotoxin | Once; 5, 10, 21 DPI | ↑ p53 protein (10DPI) | n/a | ↓ Numb (5 DPI; ↑ 10 + 21 DPI) | ↑Flk-1, ↑ p21 (10 DPI) | Muscle regeneration, cellular senescence | n/a |
| La Colla et al., J Cell Biol, 2017 [ | C2C12 myoblasts | n/a | 0.5 mM H2O2 ± 10−8 M E2 | E2 1 h prior to H2O2; Timecourse: 30 min, 1, 3, 4 h | ↑p-p53 protein @ ser15 (1–3 h); ↓ w/E2 | n/a | ↑Puma (1–4 h) ↓ w/E2, ↑ PERP (3 h) ↓ w/E2, ↓ Bcl-2 (3–4 h) ↑ w/E2, ↑ Bim (30 m–3 h) ↑ Mdm2 (30 min–1 h) ↑ w/E2 | ↑ p-FOXO3a @ser253 nuclear (30 m–1 h), ↑p-Akt (30 m–1 h), ↑ p-FoxO4 @ thr 447–451 (30 min–3 h) ↓ w/E2 @ 1 h | Differentiation, apoptosis | n/a |
| Indirect oxidizing agents | ||||||||||
| Morimoto et al., J Atherscler Thromb, 2011 [ | KK/Ay diabetic mice | 9 weeks | 2 mg/kg ATR | Once per day/4 weeks | ↓ p53 protein | n/a | n/a | ↑ p-IRS-1 @ tyr residues, ↑ p-Akt1 @ ser473, ↑p-Mdm2 @ ser186 | Insulin resistance, proteasomal degradation | Type II diabetes |
| Shinozaki et al., Sci Signal, 2014 [ | (1) F344 rats | (1) 100 weeks | (1)10 mg/kg 1400 W | (1) Once daily for 10 days | (1) ↓acetyl-p53 @ Lys379 | n/a | (1) n/a | (1) ↓S-NO SIRT1, ↓ acetyl-p65 @ Lys310; ↓ p65 | Inflammation, atrophy, nitrosative stress | Aging |
| Schwarzkopf et al., Genes Dev, 2006 [ | C2 myoblasts | n/a | 65 nM Dox ± 20 ng/ml TNF- | 24 h Dox, 8 h TNF- | n/a | ↑ Nuclear p53 and PW1 | n/a | ↓ Differentiation | Differentiation, regeneration | n/a |
| Aquilano et al., Antioxid Redox Signal, 2013 [ | (1) C57/BL/6J and CDI mice | (1) 5 weeks | (1) 20 mM BSO, 4 mM L-NAME | (1) 5 weeks oral | (1) ↑ p53 protein (BSO) | (1) ↑ p53 binding to −2317 PGC-1 | (1) ↑ PGC-1 | (1) ↓ GSH, ↑ PGC-1 | Antioxidant | n/a |
| Baldelli and Ciriolo, Aging, 2016 [ | C2C12 myoblasts | n/a | 1 mM BSO | L-NAME (1 h prior BSO) | ↑ S-NO p53 @ Cys124 (BSO) | ↑ p53 at −2317 PGC-1 | ↑ PGC-1 | ↑ PGC-1 | Antioxidant, differentiation | n/a |
| Di et al., Mutagenesis, 2017 [ | Mytilus galloprovincialis (mussels) – adductor muscle | n/a | 56 µL/L B( | 1 and 3 days ± 3 days recovery | ↑ p53 mRNA (3 days B( | n/a | ↑DNA breaks (1 + 3 days B( | ↑ tGSH (3 days B( | Atrophy, apoptosis | Environmental contaminants /carcinogens |
Notes: Literature (11 studies) was grouped by direct oxidizing agents (5 studies) and indirect oxidizing agents (6 studies). Arrows indicate whether markers regulated by this form of stress increased (↑) or decreased (↓) in expression and/or activation. If a WT vs. KO model is employed, only the results from the WT group are indicated. Various time measurements are indicated for the length of imposed stress. Studies that perform experiments in both animal and cell culture models have the methodology and results numerically divided. KO: knockout), WT: wildtype; AA: antimycin A; DPI: days post-injury; ATR: Atorvastin; OE: overexpression; RSV: resveratrol; 4-OHT: 4-Hydroxytamoxifen; E2: 17β-estradiol; mito: mitochondria; Dox: doxorubicin; S-NO: S-Nitrosylation; TST: testosterone; LPS: lipopolysaccharide; BSO: Butathione Sulfoximine.
Figure 2.p53 subcellular localization induced by oxidative stressors. p53 is normally maintained at low levels in the cytosol by its negative regulator Mdm2. When Mdm2 dimerizes, p53 is poly-ubiquitinated and targeted for degradation by the 26S proteasome [67,115]. With the induction of stress, p53 post-translational modifications allow for its subcellular redistribution. Exercise. Muscular contractions induce the activation of numerous signals, such as kinase phosphorylation, increased ROS production, enhanced cytosolic calcium concentration, and an increased AMP: ATP ratio, ultimately leading to p53 Ser15 phosphorylation [12,17,22]. Once activated, p53 localizes to the nucleus to increase NUGEMP transcription, and to the mitochondria to regulate mtDNA transcription. p53 additionally regulates energy metabolism and DNA repair pathways [26,32,36,37,42,52]. Diet modification. With caloric restriction/glucose withdrawal there is an upregulation of NO which activates ATM kinase to phosphorylate p53 (Ser18) leading to its nuclear localization [38,49]. In the nucleus, p53 regulates energy metabolism, antioxidant, cellular senescent, and apoptotic pathways [38,44,47–50,53,54]. Tissue manipulation. With immobilization and cachexia-mediated atrophy, there is p53-mediated transcriptional activation and repression of cell cycle arrest and myogenic genes, respectively [68,75]. With burn injuries, there is an increase in cytokine-mediated activation of iNOS to produce NO which inhibits SIRT1 leading to the activation of p53 as well as increased TNF-α and atrogin 1 expression to induce muscle wasting [68,71,77,78]. Oxygen deprivation. Acute and prolonged hypoxia induce p53 phosphorylation at numerous sites to enhance the repression of myogenic differentiation and upregulate cell cycle arrest and apoptotic pathways [80,84,86–88]. Irradiation. Under IR stress, TNF-α driven apoptosis is induced through p53 activation, to enhance nuclear apoptotic signaling pathways in addition to increasing p66Shc phosphorylation to initiate MOMP [92,101]. Direct/indirect oxidizing agents. Oxidizing agents such as H2O2 lead to the activation of cell death pathways mediated by phosphorylated p53 to initiate persistent senescence and apoptosis [107,108,111]. Furthermore, p53 activates kinases to phosphorylate p66Shc, inhibit ERK signaling, prevent cytoskeleton polymerization, and to induce MOMP [99–101,103]. With indirect oxidizing agents, NO/iNOS/nNOS pathways are upregulated to activate p53 by reducing the inhibition by its negative regulator SIRT1 and by S-nitrosylation of p53. This enhances nuclear localization for antioxidant and apoptotic transcription with increasing stress, and increases atrogin-1 mediated ubiquitin-proteasome activation [48,73,78,116,117].
Figure 3.p53 nuclear and mitochondrial localization and regulation of signaling mechanisms with oxidative stress. With the induction of stress, p53 post-translational modifications allow it to localize to various cellular compartments to regulate cellular homeostasis. Exercise. Once phosphorylated, p53 localizes to the mitochondria to assist Tfam and Polγ binding to mtDNA, and to increase 16S rRNA production to enhance mitochondrial biogenesis [12,17,24,26,29,30]. p53 also translocates to the nucleus to increase PGC-1α expression and activate NUGEMPs transcription [12,17,22–26,48]. Furthermore, p53 can regulate glycolysis by reducing glycolytic energy production and enhancing the pentose phosphate, fatty acid oxidation, and oxidative phosphorylation energy pathways [26,36,37,42,52]. Diet Modification. With diet modifications (DM), there is a p53-mediated upregulation of energy metabolism genes to reduce glycolysis and upregulate oxidative phosphorylation [36,37]. With caloric restriction (CR) or glucose withdrawal, p53 co-localizes in the nucleus with PGC-1α to enhance Lipin-1 expression for increased FAO. p53 upregulates enzymes for mitochondrial substrate provision, increases antioxidant defenses, increases cellular senescent and cell cycle arrest genes, and decreases apoptotic gene transcription [38,44,47–50,53,54]. On the other hand, excess caloric intake leads to p53 transcriptional repression (exemplified by red X) of GLUT 1 and GLUT 4 genes, reduces PGC-1α and NUGEMP activation, and impairs FAO gene transcription, leading to impaired energy utilization and fat accumulation [56–59,61]. Tissue Manipulation. With immobilization there is an p53-mediated transcription of cell cycle arrest genes as well as an increase in Id2 to decrease DNA-binding and transcriptional activity [68,75]. Oxygen Deprivation. Hypoxia induces p53 phosphorylation at numerous sites leading to cell cycle arrest and apoptotic transcriptional activation. Irradiation. Under IR stress, p53 increases p66Shc phosphorylation, to coordinate autophagy and apoptosis, in order to regulate cellular integrity [101,103]. Direct/Indirect Oxidizing Agents. Oxidizing agents, such as H2O2, lead to the activation of cell death pathways mediated by phosphorylated p53 to initiate persistent senescence and to enhance transcription of pro-apoptotic proteins such as Bax and PERP [107,108,110,111]. With indirect oxidizing agents, p53 nuclear localization increases antioxidant transcription. With prolonged exposure apoptosis can be induced [48].
Human studies excluded from systematic analysis and compilation in the data tables. Throughout the study, human models were largely excluded to enable a greater focus on the role of p53 in animal skeletal muscle and cell culture models. A list has been created including relevant primary human research on p53 in skeletal muscle. Search criteria include ‘p53’ AND ‘human’ AND ‘skeletal muscle’ between January 1, 1990 and March 1, 2017. This is compiled for the purpose of further viewing and analysis by academic audiences.
| Title | Authors | Year | Journal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Postexercise high-fat feeding suppresses p70S6K1 activity in human skeletal muscle | Hammond KM, Impey SG, Currell K, et al. | 2016 | Med Sci Sports Exerc |
| Mitochondrial adaptations to high-volume exercise training are rapidly reversed after a reduction in training volume in human skeletal muscle | Granata C, Oliveira RS, Little JP, et al. | 2016 | FASEB J |
| Acute endurance exercise induces nuclear p53 abundance in human skeletal muscle | Tachtsis B, Smiles WJ, Lane SC, et al. | 2016 | Front Physiol |
| 1 | Ryan ZC, Craig TA, Folmes CD, et al. | 2016 | J Biol Chem |
| Training intensity modulates changes in PGC-1 | Granata C, Oliveira RS, Little JP, et al. | 2016 | FASEB J |
| Differential expression of perilipin 2 and 5 in human skeletal muscle during aging and their association with atrophy-related genes. | Conte M, Vasuri F, Bertaggia E, et al. | 2015 | Biogerontology |
| An examination of resveratrol’s mechanisms of action in human tissue: impact of a single dose in vivo and dose responses in skeletal muscle | Williams CB, Hughes MC, Edgett BA, et al. | 2014 | PLoS One |
| Transcriptomic profiling of TK2 deficient human skeletal muscle suggests a role for the p53signalling pathway and identifies growth and differentiation factor-15 as a potential novel biomarker for mitochondrial myopathies | Kalko SG, Paco S, Jou C, et al. | 2014 | BMC Genomics |
| Increased Plin2 expression in human skeletal muscle is associated with sarcopenia and muscle weakness | Conte M, Vasuri F, Trisolino G, et al. | 2013 | PLoS One |
| Reduced carbohydrate availability enhances exercise-induced p53 signaling in human skeletal muscle: implications for mitochondrial biogenesis | Bartlett JD, Louhelainen J, Iqbal Z, et al. | 2013 | Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol |
| The effect of resistance exercise on p53, caspase-9, and caspase-3 in trained and untrained men | Sharafi H and Rahimi R. | 2012 | J Strength Cond Res |
| Matched work high-intensity interval and continuous running induce similar increases in PGC-1 | Bartlett JD, Hwa Joo C, Jeong TS, et al. | 2012 | J Appl Physiol (1985) |
| Regenerative potential of human muscle stem cells in chronic inflammation | Duijnisveld BJ, Bigot A, Beenakker KG, et al. | 2011 | Arthritis Res Ther |