Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Katayama Keiichi
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code B000305947
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Essential role of p53 in trophoblastic apoptosis induced in the developing rodent placenta by treatment with a DNA-damaging agent

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Hirofumi Yamauchi
Kei-ichi Katayama
Masaki Ueno
Xi Jun He
Takashi Mikami
Koji Uetsuka
Kunio Doi
Hiroyuki Nakayama

Summary

Placental apoptosis plays important roles in both normal morphogenesis and pathogenesis. We previously reported that administration of cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C), a DNA-damaging agent, to pregnant rats induced apoptosis of trophoblasts in the placental labyrinth zone. Our aim here was to clarify the molecular pathway of DNA damage induced-trophoblastic apoptosis. We found the accumulation and phosphorylation of p53 protein, a tumor suppressor that mediates apoptosis under various cellular stresses, in Ara-C-treated rat placentas. Expression of the mRNAs of downstream targets of p53 was upregulated, suggesting that p53 exerts its function as a transcription factor. We also observed release of mitochondrial cytochrome c and activation of caspase-9, hallmarks of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway. Phosphorylation of Chk1 and H2A.X, target substrates of DNA damage transducers, was detected immediately after Ara-C treatment, suggesting activation of DNA damage cascades to phosphorylate p53. Ara-C-induced trophoblastic apoptosis was almost completely abrogated in placentas of Trp53 (coding p53)deficient mice, whereas the levels of physiological apoptosis in trophoblasts were similar among wild-type and Trp53-deficient mice. These results indicate that p53 is essential for DNA damage-induced trophoblastic apoptosis and suggest that the mechanisms that regulate the damage-induced apoptosis differ from those that regulate physiological apoptosis.

Magazine(name)

APOPTOSIS

Publisher

SPRINGER

Volume

12

Number Of Pages

10

StartingPage

1743

EndingPage

1754

Date of Issue

2007-10

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.1007/s10495-007-0099-z

NAID

 

PMID

 

J-GLOBAL ID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCID Put Code

 

DBLP ID