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Reports

E2F-Dependent Induction of p14ARF During Cell Cycle Re-entry in Human T Cells

Ana Gutierrez del Arroyo, Selma El Messaoudi, Paula A. Clark, Marion James, Francesca Stott, Adrian Bracken, Kristian Helin and Gordon Peters

volume 6 | issue 21

1 November 2007
Pages: 2697 - 2705

This is an open-access article

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The ARF protein, encoded by alternate exon usage within the CDKN2A locus, provides a link between the retinoblastoma (pRb) and p53 tumor suppressor pathways. Agents that disable pRb or otherwise impinge on the E2F family of transcription factors induce expression of ARF, resulting in stabilization of p53 and activation of p53-regulated genes. However, in some cell types ARF is not induced upon cell cycle re-entry, as expected of a conventional E2F target gene, leading to the suggestion that the ARF promoter only responds to supra-physiological or aberrant levels of E2F. These properties have recently been attributed to a variant E2F binding site but attempts to map specific response elements within the ARF promoter have generally yielded confusing answers. Here we show that in IL2-dependent T-lymphocytes, ARF expression is induced as cells progress from G0 into S phase, in parallel with other bona fide E2F target genes. This is accompanied by increased association of E2F1 with the endogenous ARF promoter. Our findings suggest that the ability of ARF to register normal proliferative cues depends on the levels of E2F generated in different settings and argue against the idea that it reacts exclusively to oncogenic signals.

Authors

Ana Gutierrez del Arroyo

Cancer Research-UK, London Research Institute; London, UK

Selma El Messaoudi

Cancer Research-UK, London Research Institute; London, UK

Paula A. Clark

Cancer Research-UK, London Research Institute; London, UK

Marion James

Cancer Research-UK, London Research Institute; London, UK

Francesca Stott

Cancer Research-UK, London Research Institute; London, UK

Adrian Bracken

University of Copenhagen; Copenhagen, Denmark

Kristian Helin

University of Copenhagen; Copenhagen, Denmark

Gordon Peters

Cancer Research-UK, London Research Institute; London, UK


This is an open-access article

 Download PDF

If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.