Publication | Closed Access
Cell Surface Trafficking of Fas: A Rapid Mechanism of p53-Mediated Apoptosis
750
Citations
29
References
1998
Year
MitophagyApoptosisCell DeathMolecular BiologyCellular PhysiologyTumor BiologyP53 ActivationRapid MechanismAutophagyP53-induced ApoptosisCell SignalingP53-mediated ApoptosisCell TraffickingP53 ActsVascular BiologyCell BiologyBiomolecular EngineeringCell Surface TraffickingSignal TransductionTumor SuppressorIntracellular TraffickingMedicine
p53 acts as a tumor suppressor by inducing both growth arrest and apoptosis. p53-induced apoptosis can occur without new RNA synthesis through an unknown mechanism. In human vascular smooth muscle cells, p53 activation transiently increased surface Fas (CD95) expression by transport from the Golgi complex. Golgi disruption blocked both p53-induced surface Fas expression and apoptosis. p53 also induced Fas-FADD binding and transiently sensitized cells to Fas-induced apoptosis. In contrast, lpr and gld fibroblasts were resistant to p53-induced apoptosis. Thus, p53 can mediate apoptosis through Fas transport from cytoplasmic stores.
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