Genomic alterations during p53-dependent apoptosis induced by γ-irradiation of Molt-4 leukemia cells

Abstract

Molt-4 leukemia cells undergo p53-dependent apoptosis accompanied by accumulation of de novo ceramide after 14 hours of γ-irradiation. In order to identify the potential mediators involved in ceramide accumulation and the cell death response, differentially expressed genes were identified by Affymetrix Microarray Analysis. Molt-4-LXSN cells, expressing wild type p53, and p53-deficient Molt-4-E6 cells were irradiated and harvested at 3 and 8 hours post-irradiation. Human genome U133 plus 2.0 array containing >47,000 transcripts was used for gene expression profiling. From over 10,000 probes, 281 and 12 probes were differentially expressed in Molt-4-LXSN and Molt-4-E6 cells, respectively. Data analysis revealed 63 (upregulated) and 20 (downregulated) genes (>2 fold) in Molt-4-LXSN at 3 hours and 140 (upregulated) and 21 (downregulated) at 8 hours post-irradiation. In Molt-4-E6 cells, 5 (upregulated) genes each were found at 3 hours and 8 hours, respectively. In Molt-4-LXSN cells, a significant fraction of the genes with altered expression at 3 hours were found to be involved in apoptosis signaling pathway (BCL2L11), p53 pathway (PMAIP1, CDKN1A and FAS) and oxidative stress response (FDXR, CROT and JUN). Similarly, at 8 hours the genes with altered expression were involved in the apoptosis signaling pathway (BAX, BIK and JUN), p53 pathway (BAX, CDKN1A and FAS), oxidative stress response (FDXR and CROT) and p53 pathway feedback loops 2 (MDM2 and CDKN1A). A global molecular and biological interaction map analysis showed an association of these altered genes with apoptosis, senescence, DNA damage, oxidative stress, cell cycle arrest and cas-pase activation. In a targeted study, activation of apoptosis correlated with changes in gene expression of some of the above genes and revealed sequential activation of both intrinsic and extrinsic apoptotic pathways that precede ceramide accumulation and subsequent execution of apoptosis. One or more of these altered genes may be involved in p53-dependent ceramide accumulation. © 2017 Hage-Sleiman et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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Apoptosis, Cell line, tumor, Gamma rays, Humans, Leukemia, Multigene family, Systems biology, Tumor suppressor protein p53, Bim protein, Caspase, Ceramide, Cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor 1a, Dna, Fas antigen, Protein bax, Protein bik, Protein c jun, Protein crot, Protein fdxr, Protein mdm2, Protein p53, Protein pmaip1, Tumor protein, Unclassified drug, Article, Cell cycle arrest, Controlled study, Dna damage, Down regulation, Enzyme activation, Gamma irradiation, Gene activation, Gene cluster, Gene expression regulation, Gene interaction, Genetic association, Genomics, Human, Human cell, Leukemia cell line, Molt 4 leukemia cell line, Oncogene, Oncogene bax, Oncogene bcl2l11, Oncogene bik, Oncogene c jun, Oncogene cdkn1a, Oncogene crot, Oncogene fas, Oncogene fdxr, Oncogene mdm2, Oncogene pmaip1, Oxidative stress, Protein analysis, Protein expression, Senescence, Signal transduction, Upregulation, Validation study, Gamma radiation, Genetics, Pathology, Physiology, Tumor cell line

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