Phosphorylation Control of p53 DNA-Binding Cooperativity Balances Tumorigenesis and Aging

Oleg Timofeev(German Center for Lung Research), L Koch(German Center for Lung Research), Constantin Niederau(German Center for Lung Research), Alina Tscherne(German Center for Lung Research), Jean Schneikert(German Center for Lung Research), Maria Klimovich(German Center for Lung Research), Sabrina Elmshäuser(German Center for Lung Research), Marie Zeitlinger(German Center for Lung Research), Marco Mernberger(German Center for Lung Research), Andrea Nist(Philipps University of Marburg), Christian Osterburg(Goethe University Frankfurt), Volker Dötsch(Goethe University Frankfurt), Martin Hrabě de Angelis(Helmholtz Zentrum München), Thorsten Stiewe(Philipps University of Marburg)
Cancer Research
September 1, 2020
Cited by 30Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Posttranslational modifications are essential for regulating the transcription factor p53, which binds DNA in a highly cooperative manner to control expression of a plethora of tumor-suppressive programs. Here we show at the biochemical, cellular, and organismal level that the cooperative nature of DNA binding is reduced by phosphorylation of highly conserved serine residues (human S183/S185, mouse S180) in the DNA-binding domain. To explore the role of this inhibitory phosphorylation in vivo, new phosphorylation-deficient p53-S180A knock-in mice were generated. Chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing and RNA sequencing studies of S180A knock-in cells demonstrated enhanced DNA binding and increased target gene expression. In vivo, this translated into a tissue-specific vulnerability of the bone marrow that caused depletion of hematopoietic stem cells and impaired proper regeneration of hematopoiesis after DNA damage. Median lifespan was significantly reduced by 20% from 709 days in wild type to only 568 days in S180A littermates. Importantly, lifespan was reduced by a loss of general fitness and increased susceptibility to age-related diseases, not by increased cancer incidence as often seen in other p53-mutant mouse models. For example, S180A knock-in mice showed markedly reduced spontaneous tumorigenesis and increased resistance to Myc-driven lymphoma and Eml4–Alk-driven lung cancer. Preventing phosphorylation of S183/S185 in human cells boosted p53 activity and allowed tumor cells to be killed more efficiently. Together, our data identify p53 DNA-binding domain phosphorylation as a druggable mechanism that balances tumorigenesis and aging. Significance: These findings demonstrate that p53 tumor suppressor activity is reduced by DNA-binding domain phosphorylation to prevent aging and identify this phosphorylation as a potential target for cancer therapy. See related commentary by Horikawa, p. 5164


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