DNA damage and p53-mediated cell cycle arrest: A reevaluation (original) (raw)
1996, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Most mammalian cells exhibit transient delays in the G 1 and G 2 phases of the cell cycle after treatment with radiation or radiomimetic compounds. p53 is required for the arrest in G 1 , which provides time for DNA repair. Recently, a role of p53 in the G 2 ͞M transition has also been suggested. However, it has been reported that the presence of functional p53 does not always correlate with the induction of these checkpoints. To precisely assess the role of p53 in activating cell cycle checkpoints and in cell survival after radiation, we studied the response of two isogenic human fibrosarcoma cell lines differing in their p53 status (wild type or mutant). We found that when irradiated cells undergo a wild-type p53-dependent G 1 arrest, they do not subsequently arrest in G 2. Moreover, wild-type p53 cells irradiated past the G 1 checkpoint arrest in G 2 but do not delay in the subsequent G 1 phase. Furthermore, in these cell lines, which do not undergo radiation-induced apoptosis, the wild-type p53 cell line exhibited a greater radioresistance in terms of clonogenic survival. These results suggest that the two checkpoints may be interrelated, perhaps through a control system that determines, depending on the extent of the damage, whether the cell needs to arrest cell cycle progression at the subsequent checkpoint for further repair. p53 could be a crucial component of this control system.
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