The human hepatitis B virus (HBV) protein pX is a multifunctional regulatory protein that is known to affect both transcription and cell growth. Here we describe induction of apoptosis in NIH 3T3 polyclonal cell lines upon stimulation of pX expression from a dexamethasone inducible mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV)-X expression vector. The effect of long-term pX expression on the cell survival of mouse fibroblasts was confirmed in colony generation assays. This effect is not shared either by the other HBV products and it is c-myc mediated, as shown by the use of a dominant negative deletion mutant of c-myc. pX also sensitize cells to programmed cell death after exposure to DNA damaging agents. Taking advantage of stable transfectants carrying the p53val135 temperature-sensitive allele, we directly demonstrate that induction of apoptosis by pX requires p53. In p53 null mouse embryo fibroblasts pX activates transcription and confers an evident growth advantage without loss of cell viability. Although pX protein was not detectable in the experimental conditions we used, our results indicate that its expression affects both cell growth and cell death control.
(13,28,42,49,55) and cellular (10,23,27,47,56) Phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of c-Fos and c-Jun have been described as posttranslational modifications with a critical role in the regulation of AP1 function. Phosphorylation of the c-Fos C terminus seems to be important for negative autoregulation and for transformation (34,46) but not for transactivation of genes linked to an AP1 site.
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