화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.289, No.3, 756-762, 2001
Hypermutable change of human UVr-1 cells by p53 overexpression
The p53 protein has been reported to regulate cellular responses to genetic stress such as far-ultraviolet light (UV), protecting human cells from mutation. Levels of p53 protein in hypermutable RSa cells were found here to increase soon after UV irradiation, while those in UVr-1 cells, a hypomutable variant of RSa cells, showed a delayed increase. Three cell lines overexpressing wild-type p53 in UVr-1 cells exhibited higher sensitivity to UV mutagenicity than did control U-V-7 cells transfected with vector alone, assessed using the ouabain-resistance phenotypic mutation test and identification of K-ras codon 12 base substitution mutation. On the other hand, U-V-7 cells showed UV-induced elevation of antipain-sensitive protease activity, but p53 transfectants did not. Moreover, antipain treatment to U-V-7 cells was increased susceptibility to UV mutagenicity. Thus, p53 protein overproduction may sensitize human cells, at least those tested, to UV mutagenicity, in association with inhibition of protease activity.