Affiliation:
1. Department of Pathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In vivo and in vitro evidence indicate that cells do not divide indefinitely but instead stop growing and undergo a process termed cellular proliferative senescence. Very little is known about how senescence occurs, but there are several indications that the retinoblastoma protein (pRb) is involved, the most striking being that reintroduction of
RB
into
RB
−/−
tumor cell lines induces senescence. In investigating the mechanism by which pRb induces senescence, we have found that pRb causes a posttranscriptional accumulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27
KIP1
that is accompanied by an increase in p27
KIP1
specifically bound to cyclin E and a concomitant decrease in cyclin E-associated kinase activity. In contrast, pRb-related proteins p107 and p130, which also decrease cyclin E-kinase activity, do not cause an accumulation of p27
KIP1
and induce senescence poorly. In addition, the use of pRb proteins mutated in the pocket domain demonstrates that pRb upregulation of p27
KIP1
and senescence induction do not require the interaction of pRb with E2F. Furthermore, ectopic expression of p21
CIP1
or p27
KIP1
induces senescence but not the morphology change associated with pRb-mediated senescence, uncoupling senescence from the morphological transformation. Finally, the ability of pRb to maintain cell cycle arrest and induce senescence is reversibly abrogated by ablation of p27
KIP1
expression. These findings suggest that prolonged cell cycle arrest through the persistent and specific inhibition of cdk2 activity by p27
KIP1
is critical for pRb-induced senescence.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
137 articles.
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