Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Bcl-2 is an apoptotic target suppressed by both c-Myc and E2F-1

2001; Springer Nature; Volume: 20; Issue: 48 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1038/sj.onc.1204892

ISSN

1476-5594

Autores

Christine M. Eischen, Graham Packham, John Nip, Brian E. Fee, Scott W. Hiebert, Gerard P. Zambetti, John L. Cleveland,

Tópico(s)

interferon and immune responses

Resumo

Malignant transformation occurs in cells that overexpress c-Myc or that inappropriately activate E2F-1. Transformation occurs after the selection of cells that have acquired resistance to apoptosis that is triggered by these oncogenes, and a key mediator of this cell death process is the p53 tumor suppressor. In IL-3-dependent immortal 32D.3 myeloid cells the ARF/p53 apoptotic pathway is inactivated, as these cells fail to express ARF. Nonetheless, both c-Myc and E2F-1 overexpression accelerated apoptosis when these cells were deprived of IL-3. Here we report that c-Myc or E2F-1 overexpression suppresses Bcl-2 protein and RNA levels, and that restoration of Bcl-2 protein effectively blocks the accelerated apoptosis that occurs when c-Myc- or E2F-1-overexpressing cells are deprived of IL-3. Blocking p53 activity with mutant p53 did not abrogate E2F-1-induced suppression of Bcl-2. Analysis of immortal myeloid cells engineered to overexpress c-Myc and E2F-1 DNA binding mutants revealed that DNA binding activity of these oncoproteins is required to suppress Bcl-2 expression. These results suggest that the targeting of Bcl-2 family members is an important mechanism of oncogene-induced apoptosis, and that this occurs independent of the ARF/p53 pathway.

Referência(s)
Altmetric
PlumX