Publication | Closed Access
p53-Mediated Cell Death: Relationship to Cell Cycle Control
98
Citations
42
References
1993
Year
ApoptosisImmunologyWt P53Cell DeathCell ProliferationCell CycleCancer BiologyTumor BiologyP53 ActivityCell RegulationCell Cycle ControlCell SignalingCancer ResearchCell DivisionCell BiologyM1 CellsCellular SenescenceTumor SuppressorMedicine
M1 clone S6 myeloid leukemic cells do not express detectable p53 protein. When stably transfected with a temperature-sensitive mutant of p53, these cells undergo rapid cell death upon induction of wild-type (wt) p53 activity at the permissive temperature. This process has features of apoptosis. In a number of other cell systems, wt p53 activation has been shown to induce a growth arrest. Yet, wt 53 fails to induce a measurable growth arrest in M1 cells, and cell cycle progression proceeds while viability is being lost. There exists, however, a relationship between the cell cycle and p53-mediated death, and cells in G1 appear to be preferentially susceptible to the death-inducing activity of wt p53. In addition, p53-mediated M1 cell death can be inhibited by interleukin-6. The effect of the cytokine is specific to p53-mediated death, since apoptosis elicited by serum deprivation is refractory to interleukin-6. Our data imply that p53-mediated cell death is not dependent on the induction of a growth arrest but rather may result from mutually incompatible growth-regulatory signals.
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