The Retinoblastoma Protein Binds the Promoter of the Survival Gene bcl-2 and Regulates Its Transcription in Epithelial Cells through Transcription Factor AP-2

Author:

Decary Stephanie1,Decesse Julien T.1,Ogryzko Vasily1,Reed John C.2,Naguibneva Irina1,Harel-Bellan Annick1,Cremisi Chantal E.1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire Oncogenese, Differenciation et Transduction du Signal, CNRS UPR 9079, Institut Andre Lwoff, 94801 Villejuif, France

2. The Burnham Institute, La JollaCalifornia 92037

Abstract

ABSTRACT The retinoblastoma (RB) gene product has been shown to restrict cell proliferation, promote cell differentiation, and inhibit apoptosis. Loss of RB function can induce both p53-dependent apoptosis and p53-independent apoptosis; little is known about the mechanisms of RB-regulated p53-independent apoptosis. Here we show that RB specifically activates transcription of the survival gene bcl-2 in epithelial cells but not in NIH 3T3 mesenchymal cells. This transcriptional activity is mediated by the transcription factor AP-2. By monitoring protein-DNA interactions in living cells using formaldehyde cross-linking and chromatin immunoprecipitation, we show that endogenous RB and AP-2 both bind to the same bcl-2 promoter sequence. In addition, we demonstrate that RB and AP-2 also bind to the E-cadherin gene promoter in vivo, consistent with regulation of this promoter by both AP-2 and RB in epithelial cells. This study provides evidence that RB activates bcl-2 and E-cadherin by binding directly to the respective promoter sequences and not indirectly by repressing an inhibitor. This recruitment is mediated by a transcription factor, in this case AP-2. For the first time, our results suggest a direct molecular mechanism by which RB might inhibit apoptosis independently of p53. The results are discussed in a context where RB and Bcl-2 contribute under nonpathological conditions to the maintenance of cell viability in association with a differentiated phenotype, contributing to the tumor suppressor function of RB and playing important roles in normal development.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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