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Characterization of human Gadd45, a p53-regulated protein
Ist Teil von
The Journal of biological chemistry, 1994-12, Vol.269 (51), p.32672-32677
Ort / Verlag
United States: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Erscheinungsjahr
1994
Quelle
Free E-Journal (出版社公開部分のみ)
Beschreibungen/Notizen
GADD45 (growth arrest and DNA damage) is a DNA-damage-inducible gene regulated in part by the tumor suppressor p53. A role
in negative growth control has recently been suggested based on significant (more than 75%) reduction of colony formation
following over expression of Gadd45. To better understand the role of Gadd45, we have developed specific rabbit and murine
antibodies raised against the human recombinant protein. Using these antibodies, we have found that in ML-1 cells Gadd45 is
predominantly a nuclear protein. MyD118, a protein induced by terminal differentiation sharing 57% homology with Gadd45, does
not cross-react with any of the antibodies produced. As expected, the induction of Gadd45 protein by ionizing radiation (IR)
was also found to be dependent on a wild type p53 phenotype. Interestingly, WI-L2-NS, a human lymphoid cell line, showed very
high basal levels of Gadd45 mRNA and protein in addition to a high constitutive level of a mutated p53 protein. In this cell
line, the high levels of GADD45 did not inhibit cellular growth in spite of the fact that no mutations were found in GADD45
sequence. These results indicate that some cell line(s) can tolerate high levels of Gadd45 and abrogate its growth suppression
function.