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Publication : Inactivation of HAUSP in vivo modulates p53 function.

First Author  Kon N Year  2010
Journal  Oncogene Volume  29
Issue  9 Pages  1270-9
PubMed ID  19946331 Mgi Jnum  J:168184
Mgi Id  MGI:4887317 Doi  10.1038/onc.2009.427
Citation  Kon N, et al. (2010) Inactivation of HAUSP in vivo modulates p53 function. Oncogene 29(9):1270-9
abstractText  Hausp is a deubiquitinase that has been shown to regulate the p53-Mdm2 pathway. Cotransfection of p53 and Hausp stabilizes p53 through the removal of ubiquitin moieties from polyubiquitinated p53. Interestingly, knockout or RNA interference-mediated knockdown of Hausp in human cells also resulted in the stabilization of p53 due to the destabilization of Mdm2, suggesting a dynamic role of Hausp in p53 activation. To understand the physiological functions of Hausp, we generated hausp knockout mice. Hausp knockout mice die during early embryonic development between embryonic days E6.5 and E7.5. The hausp knockout embryos showed p53 activation, but no apparent increase in apoptosis. Embryonic lethality was caused by a dramatic reduction in proliferation and termination in development, in part due to p53 activation and/or abrogation of p53-independent functions. Although deletion of p53 did not completely rescue the embryonic lethality of the hausp knockout, embryonic development was extended in both hausp and p53 double knockout embryos. These data show that Hausp has a critical role in regulating the p53-Mdm2 pathway.
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