B S Plunkett's research while affiliated with Johns Hopkins University and other places

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Publications (6)


FIG. 2. Phosphorylation status of pRB by immunoblot in RKOderived cell lines. pRB was detected in cellular lysates from unirradiated cells (O hr) and in cells 1, 3, and 24 hr after irradiation with 4 Gy. (A) pRB in untransfected RKO cells (lanes 1-4) and in RC10-2, which expresses HPV16 E6 (lanes 5-8). (B) pRB in two independent HPV16 E7-transfected RKO lines, RC7-6 and RC7-14. 
FIG. 4. Expression of WAFJ/CIP) and glyceraldehyde-3phosphate dehydrogenase mRNA in RKO cell lines 4-6 hr after irradiation. Each pair of lanes represents unirradiated cells (0) or cells irradiated with 4 Gy (y). Lanes 1 and 2, normal cervical keratinocytes (PCx22); lanes 3 and 4, RKO cells transfected with vector alone (RCneo-1); lanes 5 and 6, RKO cells transfected with HPV16 E6 (RC1O-1); lanes 5-8, RKO cells transfected with HPV16 E7 (RC07-6 and RC07-14). 
FIG. 5. Cell cycle changes in cells with altered pRB or p53 function after exposure to v-irradiation. Cell cycle analysis of unirradiated cells or cells after irradiation was performed as described in Materials and Methods. The data is plotted as the ratio of the percentage of cells in S phase prior to irradiation to the percentage of cells in S phase after irradiation; mean values of multiple determinations and standard errors are shown. Ratios for control RKO cells [RKO (n = 2), RCneo-1 (n = 5)], RKO cells transfected with HPV16 E6 [RC1O-1 (n = 4), RC10-2 (n = 2), RC10-3 (n = 3)], and RKO cells transfected with HPV16 E7 [RC07-6 (n = 3), RC07-14 (n = 3)] are shown. Embryonic fibroblasts from normal mice [WT (n = 3)], mice with disrupted RB genes [RB(-) (n = 3)], and mice with disrupted p53 genes [p53(-) (n = 2)] were similarly evaluated. 
p53-Dependent G_1 Arrest Involves pRB-Related Proteins and is Disrupted by the Human Papillomavirus 16 E7 Oncoprotein
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  • Full-text available

July 1994

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79 Reads

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376 Citations

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

R.J.C. Slebos

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M H Lee

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B S Plunkett

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K R Cho

The cell cycle regulatory tumor suppressor proteins p53 and pRB are targeted for inactivation by several tumor viruses, including the high-risk types of human papillomaviruses (HPVs) via interactions of the HPV E6 and E7 oncoproteins with p53 and pRB, respectively. p53 plays a central role in a signal transduction pathway that mediates G1 arrest after DNA damage, though the mechanism by which G1 arrest occurs has not been elucidated. The cyclin-associated protein p21waf1/cip1 has recently been shown to be induced by p53 and to inhibit cyclin complex-mediated phosphorylation of pRB in vitro. Thus, we investigated a possible role for pRB in the p53-mediated DNA damage response. After gamma-irradiation, cells expressing wild-type p53 arrested in G1, contained increased levels of WAF1/CIP1 mRNA, and demonstrated accumulation of hypophosphorylated pRB. In contrast, cell lines with abnormal p53 genes or with p53 functionally inactivated by the E6 oncoprotein of HPV16 (a high-risk HPV) failed to arrest in G1, did not elevate WAF1/CIP1 mRNA, and did not accumulate hypophosphorylated pRB. Despite apparently normal elevation of p53 protein and WAF1/CIP1 mRNA after irradiation, cells expressing HPV16 E7 also failed to arrest in G1 and did not accumulate hypophosphorylated pRB. Disruption of RB genes alone did not totally abrogate this G1 arrest. Our results suggest that p53 indirectly regulates phosphorylation of pRB and that pRB and/or other pRB-like molecules that bind to HPV16 E7 participate in the DNA damage-mediated G1 arrest signal. In the process of HPV infection, the HPV E6 and E7 oncoproteins may undermine this cell cycle checkpoint, contributing to the accumulation of genetic alterations during tumorigenesis.

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Human papillomavirus 16 E6 expression disrupts the p53-mediated cellular response to DNA damage

June 1993

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25 Reads

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560 Citations

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Infection with certain types of human papillomaviruses (HPV) is highly associated with carcinomas of the human uterine cervix. However, HPV infection alone does not appear to be sufficient for the process of malignant transformation, suggesting the requirement of additional cellular events. After DNA damage, normal mammalian cells exhibit G1 cell-cycle arrest and inhibition of replicative DNA synthesis. This mechanism, which requires wild-type p53, presumably allows cells to undertake DNA repair and avoid the fixation of mutations. We directly tested whether the normal response of cervical epithelial cells to DNA damage may be undermined by interactions between the E6 protein expressed by oncogenic HPV types and wild-type p53. We treated primary keratinocytes with the DNA-damaging agent actinomycin D and demonstrated inhibition of replicative DNA synthesis and a significant increase in p53 protein levels. In contrast, inhibition of DNA synthesis and increases in p53 protein did not occur after actinomycin D treatment of keratinocytes immortalized with HPV16 E6/E7 or in cervical carcinoma cell lines containing HPV16, HPV18, or mutant p53 alone. To test the effects of E6 alone on the cellular response to DNA damage, HPV16 E6 was expressed in the carcinoma cell line RKO, resulting in undetectable baseline levels of p53 protein and loss of the G1 arrest that normally occurs in these cells after DNA damage. These findings demonstrate that oncogenic E6 can disrupt an important cellular response to DNA damage mediated by p53 and may contribute to the subsequent accumulation of genetic changes associated with cervical tumorigenesis.


Kastan MB, Zhan Q, el-Deiry WS, Carrier F, Jacks T, Walsh WV, Plunkett BS, Vogelstein B and Fornace Jr AJA mammalian cell cycle checkpoint pathway utilizing p53 and GADD45 is defective in ataxia-telangiectasia. Cell 71: 587-597

December 1992

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315 Reads

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3,026 Citations

Cell

Cell cycle checkpoints can enhance cell survival and limit mutagenic events following DNA damage. Primary murine fibroblasts became deficient in a G1 checkpoint activated by ionizing radiation (IR) when both wild-type p53 alleles were disrupted. In addition, cells from patients with the radiosensitive, cancer-prone disease ataxia-telangiectasia (AT) lacked the IR-induced increase in p53 protein levels seen in normal cells. Finally, IR induction of the human GADD45 gene, an induction that is also defective in AT cells, was dependent on wild-type p53 function. Wild-type but not mutant p53 bound strongly to a conserved element in the GADD45 gene, and a p53-containing nuclear factor, which bound this element, was detected in extracts from irradiated cells. Thus, we identified three participants (AT gene(s), p53, and GADD45) in a signal transduction pathway that controls cell cycle arrest following DNA damage; abnormalities in this pathway probably contribute to tumor development.


Kuerbitz SJ, Plunkett BS, Walsh WV, Kastan MBWild-type p53 is a cell cycle checkpoint determinant following irradiation. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 89: 7491-7495

September 1992

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49 Reads

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1,779 Citations

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Cell cycle checkpoints appear to contribute to an increase in cell survival and a decrease in abnormal heritable genetic changes following exposure to DNA damaging agents. Though several radiation-sensitive yeast mutants have been identified, little is known about the genes that control these responses in mammalian cells. Recent studies from our laboratory have demonstrated a close correlation between expression of wild-type p53 genes in human hematopoietic cells and their ability to arrest in G1 phase after certain types of DNA damage. In the present study, this correlation was first generalized to nonhematopoietic mammalian cells as well. A cause and effect relationship between expression of wild-type p53 and the G1 arrest that occurs after gamma irradiation was then established by demonstrating (i) acquisition of the G1 arrest after gamma irradiation following transfection of wild-type p53 genes into cells lacking endogenous p53 genes and (ii) loss of the G1 arrest after irradiation following transfection of mutant p53 genes into cells with wild-type endogenous p53 genes. A defined role for p53 (the most commonly mutated gene in human cancers) in a physiologic pathway has, to our knowledge, not been reported previously. Furthermore, these experiments illustrate one way in which a mutant p53 gene product can function in a "dominant negative" manner. Participation of p53 in this pathway suggests a mechanism for the contribution of abnormalities in p53 to tumorigenesis and genetic instability and provides a useful model for studies of the molecular mechanisms of p53 involvement in controlling the cell cycle.


Wild-type p53 is a cell cycle checkpoint determinant following irradiation

August 1992

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53 Reads

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1,238 Citations

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Cell cycle checkpoints appear to contribute to an increase in cell survival and a decrease in abnormal heritable genetic changes following exposure to DNA damaging agents. Though several radiation-sensitive yeast mutants have been identified, little is known about the genes that control these responses in mammalian cells. Recent studies from our laboratory have demonstrated a close correlation between expression of wild-type p53 genes in human hematopoietic cells and their ability to arrest in G1 phase after certain types of DNA damage. In the present study, this correlation was first generalized to nonhematopoietic mammalian cells as well. A cause and effect relationship between expression of wild-type p53 and the G1 arrest that occurs after gamma irradiation was then established by demonstrating (i) acquisition of the G1 arrest after gamma irradiation following transfection of wild-type p53 genes into cells lacking endogenous p53 genes and (ii) loss of the G1 arrest after irradiation following transfection of mutant p53 genes into cells with wild-type endogenous p53 genes. A defined role for p53 (the most commonly mutated gene in human cancers) in a physiologic pathway has, to our knowledge, not been reported previously. Furthermore, these experiments illustrate one way in which a mutant p53 gene product can function in a "dominant negative" manner. Participation of p53 in this pathway suggests a mechanism for the contribution of abnormalities in p53 to tumorigenesis and genetic instability and provides a useful model for studies of the molecular mechanisms of p53 involvement in controlling the cell cycle.


Citations (5)


... P53 wild type facilitates radiation-induced apoptosis. Typically, there are low levels of p53 in the cell, but it increases after irradiation, causing the cell to stop growing or apoptosis [47,48]. Loss of normal p53 function also increases the risk of malignancy, and the p53 mutation is the most common in human cancer. ...

Reference:

The role of microRNA-induced apoptosis in diverse radioresistant cancers
Wild-type p53 is a cell cycle checkpoint determinant following irradiation
  • Citing Article
  • August 1992

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

... In addition, ERβ1 may act as a tumor suppressor, blocking the cell cycle by downregulating other cell cycle-promoting genes including cyclin H, cyclin B, and CDK1 (Reese et al., 2017). Wild-type p53 is a cell cycle checkpoint protein and may inhibit oncogene-mediated proliferation (Eliyahu et al., 1989;Kuerbitz et al., 1992). p53 is another target of ERβ in TNBC, and the mutant status of p53 determines the effect of ERβ (Bado et al., 2016). ...

Kuerbitz SJ, Plunkett BS, Walsh WV, Kastan MBWild-type p53 is a cell cycle checkpoint determinant following irradiation. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 89: 7491-7495
  • Citing Article
  • September 1992

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

... Upon DNA damage induction, histone H2AX is phosphorylated (γH2AX) by Ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) initiating the recruitment of DNA damage response proteins. ATM activates the transcriptional activity of p53 at its targets, such as the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21 and the E3 ubiquitin ligase Mdm2, a negative regulator of p53 16,17 . This leads to p53 accumulation and subsequent generation of p53 pulses through the p53-MDM2 negative feedback loop. ...

Kastan MB, Zhan Q, el-Deiry WS, Carrier F, Jacks T, Walsh WV, Plunkett BS, Vogelstein B and Fornace Jr AJA mammalian cell cycle checkpoint pathway utilizing p53 and GADD45 is defective in ataxia-telangiectasia. Cell 71: 587-597
  • Citing Article
  • December 1992

Cell

... In normal healthy cells, DNA damage is detected by p53, and subsequently, cells are arrested at the G1 phase to inhibit cell cycle progression in the presence of DNA lesions. However, in HPV-infected cells, p53 is degraded by E6, and Rb is inactivated by E7, both of which result in cell cycle progression to S phase even in the presence of DNA damage, increasing the likelihood of CIN and micronuclei formation [64][65][66]. Several serotypes of the β-HPV genus can also induce the formation of micronuclei and subsequently increase tumorigenic mutations in nonmelanoma skin cancer [58]. HPV8 E6 reduces the availability of Bloom syndrome protein (BLM), which is involved in resolving chromosome bridges during anaphase and facilitating faithful chromosome segregation and results in an increased frequency of micronuclei [58,67]. ...

p53-Dependent G_1 Arrest Involves pRB-Related Proteins and is Disrupted by the Human Papillomavirus 16 E7 Oncoprotein

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

... Specifically, viral proteins E6 and E7 incapacitate key tumour suppressor regulators like TP53 20 and RB 21 , disrupting apoptosis and cell cycle regulation. Furthermore, E6 directly 90 interferes with DNA damage repair processes 22 . While these strategies effectively support viral replication, they render the host cell incapable of managing defective DNA damage repair, leading to a gradual increase in genomic instability over time 22 . ...

Human papillomavirus 16 E6 expression disrupts the p53-mediated cellular response to DNA damage
  • Citing Article
  • June 1993

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences