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p53 Modulates Notch Signaling in MCF-7 Breast Cancer Cells by Associating With the Notch Transcriptional Complex Via MAML1

  • Jieun Yun
  • , Ingrid Espinoza
  • , Antonio Pannuti
  • , Damian Romero
  • , Luis Martinez
  • , Mary Caskey
  • , Adina Stanculescu
  • , Maurizio Bocchetta
  • , Paola Rizzo
  • , Vimla Band
  • , Hamid Band
  • , Hwan Mook Kim
  • , Song Kyu Park
  • , Keon Wook Kang
  • , Maria Laura Avantaggiati
  • , Christian R. Gomez
  • , Todd Golde
  • , Barbara Osborne
  • , Lucio Miele
  • Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology
  • Loyola University Chicago
  • University of Mississippi
  • Louisiana State Health Sciences Center and Louisiana Cancer Research Consortium
  • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • University of Ferrara
  • University of Nebraska Medical Center
  • Gachon University
  • Korea University
  • Seoul National University
  • Georgetown University
  • University of Florida
  • University of Massachusetts

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

29 Scopus citations

Abstract

p53 and Notch-1 play important roles in breast cancer biology. Notch-1 inhibits p53 activity in cervical and breast cancer cells. Conversely, p53 inhibits Notch activity in T-cells but stimulates it in human keratinocytes. Notch co-activator MAML1 binds p53 and functions as a p53 co-activator. We studied the regulation of Notch signaling by p53 in MCF-7 cells and normal human mammary epithelial cells (HMEC). Results show that overexpression of p53 or activation of endogenous p53 with Nutlin-3 inhibits Notch-dependent transcriptional activity and Notch target expression in a dose-dependent manner. This effect could be partially rescued by transfection of MAML1 but not p300. Standard and quantitative co-immunoprecipitation experiments readily detected a complex containing p53 and Notch-1 in MCF-7 cells. Formation of this complex was inhibited by dominant negative MAML1 (DN-MAML1) and stimulated by wild-type MAML1. Standard and quantitative far-Western experiments showed a complex including p53, Notch-1, and MAML1. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) experiments showed that p53 can associate with Notch-dependent HEY1 promoter and this association is inhibited by DN-MAML1 and stimulated by wild-type MAML1. Our data support a model in which p53 associates with the Notch transcriptional complex (NTC) in a MAML1-dependent fashion, most likely through a p53-MAML1 interaction. In our cellular models, the effect of this association is to inhibit Notch-dependent transcription. Our data suggest that p53-null breast cancers may lack this Notch-modulatory mechanism, and that therapeutic strategies that activate wild-type p53 can indirectly cause inhibition of Notch transcriptional activity.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3115-3127
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of Cellular Physiology
Volume230
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1 2015

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