About: TP53BP2 is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 10 publications have been published within this topic receiving 184 citations. The topic is also known as: 53BP2 & ASPP2.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that 53BP2 is located in the mitochondria and induces apoptosis associated with depression of the mitochondrial trans‐membrane potential (ΔΨm) and activation of caspase‐9.
Abstract: The p53 binding protein 2 (53BP2) has been identified as the interacting protein to p53, Bcl-2, and p65 subunit of nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB). The TP53BP2 gene encodes two splicing variants, 53BP2S and 53BP2L, previously known as apoptosis stimulating protein 2 of p53 (ASPP2). We found that these 53BP2 proteins are located predominantly in the cytoplasm and induce apoptosis as demonstrated by cleavage of poly ADP ribose polymerase (PARP) and annexin V staining. Furthermore, we demonstrate that 53BP2 is located in the mitochondria and induces apoptosis associated with depression of the mitochondrial trans-membrane potential (DeltaPsim) and activation of caspase-9. From these findings we conclude that 53BP2 induces apoptosis through the mitochondrial death pathway.
TL;DR: The genomic organization of TP53BP2 transcripts is examined and it is found that it encodes two mRNA species, either with (53 BP2) or without exon 3 (ASPP2), by alternative splicing in various cell lines and tissues.
TL;DR: The study showed that miR‐548d‐3p/TP53BP2 pathway is critically involved in the proliferation and apoptosis of breast cancer cells and may be a new therapeutic target of Breast cancer cells.
Abstract: Fast growth and hardly any apoptosis are important characteristics of breast cancer, which assure the spread via invasion and metastasis of breast cancer cells. Inhibition of fast proliferation and induction of apoptosis are critical way to cure this cancer. microRNAs (miRNAs) had been increasingly reported to be the critical regulator of tumorigenesis. In our study, we found that increasing copy number of miR-548d-2-3p is critically involved poor prognosis. We overexpressed miR-548d-3p in MDA-MB-231cells and found that the proliferation was promoted significantly, whereas the inhibition of miR-548d-3p repressed the proliferation of MDA-MB-231 cells and also induced the increase in apoptosis. Additionally, we found that miR-548d-3p downregulated the expression of TP53BP2 by directly targeting the 3'UTR. We also found that knockdown of TP53BP2 significantly resorted the proliferation and apoptosis regulated by miR-548d-3p inhibitor. Our study showed that miR-548d-3p/TP53BP2 pathway is critically involved in the proliferation and apoptosis of breast cancer cells and may be new therapeutic target of breast cancer cells.
TL;DR: Using PCR Array analysis to determine the gene and microRNA expression profiles in human prostate cancer cell lines transduced with AT2R recombinant adenovirus demonstrated that TRAIL-R2, Gadd45a and HRK may be novel target genes for further study of the mechanism of At2R-mediated apoptosis in prostate cancer cells.
Abstract: Increased expression of angiotensin II type 2 receptor (AT2R) induces apoptosis in numerous tumor cell lines, with either Angiotensin II-dependent or Angiotensin II-independent regulation, but its molecular mechanism remains poorly understood. Here, we used PCR Array analysis to determine the gene and microRNA expression profiles in human prostate cancer cell lines transduced with AT2R recombinant adenovirus. Our results demonstrated that AT2R over expression leads to up-regulation of 6 apoptosis-related genes (TRAIL-R2, BAG3, BNIPI, HRK, Gadd45a, TP53BP2), 2 cytokine genes (IL6 and IL8) and 1 microRNA, and down-regulation of 1 apoptosis-related gene TNFSF10 and 2 cytokine genes (BMP6, BMP7) in transduced DU145 cells. HRK was identified as an up-regulated gene in AT2R-transduced PC-3 cells by real-time RT-PCR. Next, we utilized siRNAs to silence the up-regulated genes to further determine their roles on AT2R overexpression mediated apoptosis. The results showed downregulation of Gadd45a reduced the apoptotic effect by ∼30% in DU145 cells, downregulation of HRK reduced AT2R-mediated apoptosis by more than 50% in PC-3 cells, while downregulation of TRAIL-R2 enhanced AT2R-mediated apoptosis more than 4 times in DU145 cells. We also found that the effects on AT2R-mediated apoptosis caused by downregulation of Gadd45a, TRAIL-R2 and HRK were independent in activation of p38 MAPK, p44/42 MAPK and p53. Taken together, our results demonstrated that TRAIL-R2, Gadd45a and HRK may be novel target genes for further study of the mechanism of AT2R-mediated apoptosis in prostate cancer cells.