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Publication : p53 regulation of ammonia metabolism through urea cycle controls polyamine biosynthesis.

First Author  Li L Year  2019
Journal  Nature Volume  567
Issue  7747 Pages  253-256
PubMed ID  30842655 Mgi Jnum  J:274326
Mgi Id  MGI:6294815 Doi  10.1038/s41586-019-0996-7
Citation  Li L, et al. (2019) p53 regulation of ammonia metabolism through urea cycle controls polyamine biosynthesis. Nature 567(7747):253-256
abstractText  Cancer cells exhibit altered and usually increased metabolic processes to meet their high biogenetic demands(1,2). Under these conditions, ammonia is concomitantly produced by the increased metabolic processing. However, it is unclear how tumour cells dispose of excess ammonia and what outcomes might be caused by the accumulation of ammonia. Here we report that the tumour suppressor p53, the most frequently mutated gene in human tumours, regulates ammonia metabolism by repressing the urea cycle. Through transcriptional downregulation of CPS1, OTC and ARG1, p53 suppresses ureagenesis and elimination of ammonia in vitro and in vivo, leading to the inhibition of tumour growth. Conversely, downregulation of these genes reciprocally activates p53 by MDM2-mediated mechanism(s). Furthermore, the accumulation of ammonia causes a significant decline in mRNA translation of the polyamine biosynthetic rate-limiting enzyme ODC, thereby inhibiting the biosynthesis of polyamine and cell proliferation. Together, these findings link p53 to ureagenesis and ammonia metabolism, and further reveal a role for ammonia in controlling polyamine biosynthesis and cell proliferation.
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