p53 does not repress hypoxia-induced transcription of the vascular endothelial growth factor gene.
Article 1997 en
Authors
FA
Faton Agani
DK
David G. Kirsch
SF
Scott L. Friedman
Abstract
1 min read
Hypoxia-induced neovascularization mediated by vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) contributes to tumor progression. Based on its effects when overexpressed in transient transfection assays, p53 has been proposed to repress VEGF transcription. To investigate this hypothesis, we have analyzed endogenous VEGF mRNA levels in Hep3B cells stably expressing an inducible p53-estrogen receptor fusion protein and in irradiated RKO cells expressing endogenous wild-type p53. In both cell lines, VEGF mRNA levels increased in response to hypoxia, either in the presence or absence of functional p53. Our data provide no evidence for a causal relationship between the loss of p53 activity and increased VEGF expression that is observed during tumor progression. Studies that attribute repressor functions to p53 based on analysis of cells transiently overexpressing this protein should be interpreted cautiously.
Rajani Ravi, Bijoyesh Mookerjee, Zaver M. Bhujwalla, Thomas R. Sutter, Dmitri Artemov, Qinwen Zeng, Larry E. Dillehay, Ashima Madan, Gregg L. Friedman, Atul Bedi
Rajani Ravi, Bijoyesh Mookerjee, Zaver M. Bhujwalla, Thomas R. Sutter, Dmitri Artemov, Qinwen Zeng, Larry E. Dillehay, Ashima Madan, Gregg L. Friedman, Atul Bedi
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