학술논문

Doxorubicin promotes transcriptional upregulation of Cdc25B in cancer cells by releasing Sp1 from the promoter.
Document Type
Article
Source
Oncogene. 10/17/2013, Vol. 32 Issue 42, p5123-5128. 6p.
Subject
*DOXORUBICIN
*GENETIC transcription regulation
*CANCER cells
*PROMOTERS (Genetics)
*PHOSPHATASES
*CELL cycle
*CYCLIN-dependent kinases
Language
ISSN
0950-9232
Abstract
Cdc25B phosphatases have a key role in G2/M cell-cycle progression by activating the CDK1-cyclinB1 complexes and functioning as important targets of checkpoints. Overexpression of Cdc25B results in a bypass of the G2/M checkpoint and illegitimate entry into mitosis. It can also cause replicative stress, which leads to genomic instability. Thus, fine-tuning of the Cdc25B expression level is critical for correct cell-cycle arrest in response to DNA damage. In response to genotoxic stress, Cdc25B is mainly regulated by post-transcriptional mechanisms affecting either Cdc25B protein stability or translation. Here, we show that upon DNA damage Cdc25B can be regulated at the transcriptional level. Although ionizing radiation downregulates Cdc25B in a p53-dependent pathway, doxorubicin transcriptionally upregulates Cdc25B in p53-proficient cancer cells. We show that in the presence of wild-type p53, doxorubicin activates the Cdc25B promoter by preventing the binding of Sp1 and increasing the binding of NF-Y on the Cdc25B promoter, thus preventing p53 from downregulating this promoter. Our results highlight the mechanistically distinct regulation of the three Cdc25 phosphatases by checkpoint signalling following doxorubicin treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]