|
|
Impact of p53-knockout and Topotecan Treatment on
Gene Expression Profiles in Human Colon Carcinoma Cells: A Pharmacogenomics Study.
Sayed S. Daoud, Peter J. Munson, William Reinhold, Lynn Young,
Vinay V. Prabhu, Qiang Yu, Jihyun LaRose, Kurt W. Kohn, John N. Weinstein and Yves Pommier
Cancer Res 2003 Jun 1;63(11):2782-93
 |
Read article online |
 |
|
Abstract:
To uncover transcriptional stress responses related to p53, we used cDNA microarrays (National
Cancer Institute Oncochips comprising 6500 different genes) to characterize the gene expression
profiles of wild-type p53 HCT-116 cells and an isogenic p53 knockout counterpart after treatment with
topotecan, a specific topoisomerase I inhibitor. The use of the p53 knockout cells had the advantage
over p53-overexpressing systems in that p53 activation is mediated physiologically. RNA was extracted
after low (0.1 µΜ)- and high (1 µΜ)-dose topotecan at multiple time points within the first 6 h of
treatment. To facilitate simultaneous study of the p53 status and pharmacological effects on gene
expression, we developed a novel "cross-referenced network" experimental design and used multiple
linear least squares fitting to optimize estimates of relative transcript levels in the network of
experimental conditions. Approximately 10% of the transcripts were up- or down-regulated in response to
topotecan in the p53+/+ cells, whereas only 1% of the transcripts changed in the p53-/- cells, indicating
that p53 has a broad effect on the transcriptional response to this stress. Individual transcripts and
their relationships were analyzed using clustered image maps and by a novel two-dimensional
analysis/visualization, gene expression map, in which each gene expression level is represented as a
function of both the genotypic/phenotypic difference (i.e., p53 status) and the treatment effect
(i.e., of topotecan dose and time of exposure). Overall, drug-induced p53 activation was associated
with a coherent genetic program leading to cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. We identified novel
p53-induced and DNA damage-induced genes (the proapoptotic SIVA gene and a set of transforming growth
factor ß-related genes). Genes induced independently of p53 included the antiapoptotic cFLIP gene and
known stress genes related to the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway and the Fos/Jun pathway.
Genes that were negatively regulated by p53 included members of the antiapoptotic protein chaperone
heat shock protein 70 family. Finally, among the p53-dependent genes whose expression was independent
of drug treatment was S100A4, a small Ca2+-binding protein that has recently been implicated in p53
binding and regulation. The new experimental design and gene expression map analysis introduced here
are applicable to a wide range of studies that encompass both treatment effects and genotypic or
phenotypic differences.
|