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Publication : Pathological Relationship between Intracellular Superoxide Metabolism and p53 Signaling in Mice.

First Author  Watanabe K Year  2021
Journal  Int J Mol Sci Volume  22
Issue  7 PubMed ID  33805584
Mgi Jnum  J:308807 Mgi Id  MGI:6751146
Doi  10.3390/ijms22073548 Citation  Watanabe K, et al. (2021) Pathological Relationship between Intracellular Superoxide Metabolism and p53 Signaling in Mice. Int J Mol Sci 22(7)
abstractText  Intracellular superoxide dismutases (SODs) maintain tissue homeostasis via superoxide metabolism. We previously reported that intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS), including superoxide accumulation caused by cytoplasmic SOD (SOD1) or mitochondrial SOD (SOD2) insufficiency, induced p53 activation in cells. SOD1 loss also induced several age-related pathological changes associated with increased oxidative molecules in mice. To evaluate the contribution of p53 activation for SOD1 knockout (KO) (Sod1(-)(/-)) mice, we generated SOD1 and p53 KO (double-knockout (DKO)) mice. DKO fibroblasts showed increased cell viability with decreased apoptosis compared with Sod1(-)(/-) fibroblasts. In vivo experiments revealed that p53 insufficiency was not a great contributor to aging-like tissue changes but accelerated tumorigenesis in Sod1(-)(/-) mice. Furthermore, p53 loss failed to improve dilated cardiomyopathy or the survival in heart-specific SOD2 conditional KO mice. These data indicated that p53 regulated ROS-mediated apoptotic cell death and tumorigenesis but not ROS-mediated tissue degeneration in SOD-deficient models.
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