Abstract

Inactivation of cell death is a major step in tumor development, and p53, a tumor suppressor frequently mutated in cancer, is a critical mediator of cell death. While a role for p53 in apoptosis is well established, direct links to other pathways controlling cell death are unknown. Here we describe DRAM (damage-regulated autophagy modulator), a p53 target gene encoding a lysosomal protein that induces macroautophagy, as an effector of p53-mediated death. We show that p53 induces autophagy in a DRAM-dependent manner and, while overexpression of DRAM alone causes minimal cell death, DRAM is essential for p53-mediated apoptosis. Moreover, analysis of DRAM in primary tumors revealed frequent decreased expression often accompanied by retention of wild-type p53. Collectively therefore, these studies not only report a stress-induced regulator of autophagy but also highlight the relationship of DRAM and autophagy to p53 function and damage-induced programmed cell death.

Keywords

AutophagyBiologyProgrammed cell deathApoptosisCell biologySuppressorDramEffectorCancer researchRegulatorGeneGenetics

MeSH Terms

Amino Acid SequenceAnimalsApoptosisAutophagyBase SequenceBinding SitesCarcinomaCell LineCell LineTumorCell TransformationNeoplasticConserved SequenceDNA DamageDown-RegulationHumansLysosomesMembrane ProteinsMolecular Sequence DataOxidative StressProtein BindingProteinsTumor Suppressor Protein p53

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Publication Info

Year
2006
Type
article
Volume
126
Issue
1
Pages
121-134
Citations
1333
Access
Closed

Social Impact

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Citation Metrics

1333
OpenAlex
57
Influential
1093
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Cite This

Diane Crighton, Simon Wilkinson, Jim O’Prey et al. (2006). DRAM, a p53-Induced Modulator of Autophagy, Is Critical for Apoptosis. Cell , 126 (1) , 121-134. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2006.05.034

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2006.05.034
PMID
16839881

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%