Expression of the Bcl-3 proto-oncogene suppresses p53 activation

D Kashatus, P Cogswell, AS Baldwin - Genes & development, 2006 - genesdev.cshlp.org
D Kashatus, P Cogswell, AS Baldwin
Genes & development, 2006genesdev.cshlp.org
While Bcl-3 expression in cancer was originally thought to be limited to B-cell lymphomas
with a 14; 19 chromosomal translocation, more recent evidence indicates that expression of
this presumptive oncoprotein is significantly more widespread in cancer. However, an
oncogenic role for Bcl-3 has not been clearly identified. Experiments presented here
indicate that Bcl-3 is inducible by DNA damage and is required for the induction of Hdm2
gene expression and the suppression of persistent p53 activity. Furthermore, constitutive …
While Bcl-3 expression in cancer was originally thought to be limited to B-cell lymphomas with a 14;19 chromosomal translocation, more recent evidence indicates that expression of this presumptive oncoprotein is significantly more widespread in cancer. However, an oncogenic role for Bcl-3 has not been clearly identified. Experiments presented here indicate that Bcl-3 is inducible by DNA damage and is required for the induction of Hdm2 gene expression and the suppression of persistent p53 activity. Furthermore, constitutive expression of Bcl-3 suppresses DNA damage-induced p53 activation and inhibits p53-induced apoptosis through a mechanism that is at least partly dependent on the up-regulation of Hdm2. The results provide insight into a mechanism whereby altered expression of Bcl-3 leads to tumorigenic potential. Since Bcl-3 is required for germinal center formation, these results suggest functional similarities with the unrelated Bcl-6 oncoprotein in suppressing potential p53-dependent cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in response to somatic hypermutation and class switch recombination.
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