Donna P. Frazier
Wake Forest University
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Featured researches published by Donna P. Frazier.
Oncogene | 2007
Kazushi Inoue; Ali Mallakin; Donna P. Frazier
Dmp1 (cyclin D binding myb-like protein 1; also called Dmtf1) is a transcription factor that was isolated in a yeast two-hybrid screen through its binding property to cyclin D2. Although it was initially predicted to be involved in the cyclin D-Rb pathway, overexpression of Dmp1 in primary cells induces cell cycle arrest in an Arf, p53-dependent fashion. Dmp1 is a unique Arf regulator, the promoter of which is activated by oncogenic Ras-Raf signaling. Dmp1 expression is repressed by physiological mitogenic stimuli as well as by overexpressed E2F proteins; thus, it is a novel marker of cells that have exited from the cell cycle. Spontaneous and oncogene-induced tumor formation is accelerated in both Dmp1+/− and Dmp1−/− mice; the Dmp1+/− tumors often retain and express the wild-type allele; thus, Dmp1 is haplo-insufficient for tumor suppression. Tumors from Dmp1+/− and Dmp1−/− mice often retain wild-type Arf and p53, suggesting that Dmp1 is a physiological regulator of the Arf-p53 pathway. The human DMP1 (hDMP1) gene is located on chromosome 7q21, the locus of which is often deleted in myeloid leukemia and also in some types of solid tumors. Post-translational modification of Dmp1 and its role in human malignancy remain to be investigated.
Expert Review of Molecular Diagnostics | 2009
Pankaj Taneja; Donna P. Frazier; Robert D. Kendig; Dejan Maglic; Takayuki Sugiyama; Fumitake Kai; Neetu Kumra Taneja; Kazushi Inoue
Mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) long terminal repeat (LTR)-driven transgenic mice are excellent models for breast cancer as they allow for the targeted expression of various oncogenes and growth factors in neoplastic transformation of mammary glands. Numerous MMTV-LTR-driven transgenic mouse models of breast cancer have been created in the past three decades, including MMTV-neu/ErbB2, cyclin D1, cyclin E, Ras, Myc, int-1 and c-rel. These transgenic mice develop mammary tumors with different latency, histology and invasiveness, reflecting the oncogenic pathways activated by the transgene. Recently, homologous sequences of the env gene of MMTV have been identified in approximately 40% of human breast cancers, but not in normal breast or other types of cancers, suggesting possible involvement of mammary tumor virus in human breast carcinogenesis. Accumulating evidence demonstrates the association of MMTV provirus with progesterone receptor, p53 mutations and advanced-stage breast cancer. Thus, the detection of MMTV-like sequences may have diagnostic value to predict the clinical outcome of breast cancer patients.
Oncogene | 2007
Pankaj Taneja; Ali Mallakin; La Matise; Donna P. Frazier; M Choudhary; Kazushi Inoue
Both genotoxic and oncogenic stress activates the nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) and p53 proteins; however, the p53 activity is antagonized by NF-κB signaling. Dmp1 is a Myb-like transcription factor that activates the Arf-p53 pathway. The Dmp1 promoter was activated by a classical NF-κB activator tumor necrosis factor α, but repressed by treatment of cells with non-classical NF-κB activators, anthracyclins and UV-C. p65 and other subsets of NF-κB proteins were bound to the Dmp1 promoter following anthracyclin/UV-C treatment of rodent fibroblasts. This resulted in the downregulation of Dmp1 mRNA and protein. Repression of the Dmp1 transcription by anthracyclins depended on the unique NF-κB site on the promoter. Downregulation of p65 significantly attenuated the repression of the Dmp1 promoter by anthracyclins/UV-C. The amount of Dmp1 bound to the Arf promoter decreased significantly upon anthracyclin treatment; this, in turn, downregulated the Arf levels. Repression of the Arf promoter by p65 or anthracyclins depended on Dmp1, which was significantly attenuated in Dmp1−/− cells. Both Dmp1−/−and Arf−/−cells showed resistance to anthracyclin-induced cell death compared to wild-type cells; non-immortalized p65-knockdown cells were much more sensitive. Thus, the Dmp1-Arf pathway is repressed by p65 in response to genotoxic stress, which implicates a novel mechanism of p53 inactivation by NF-κB.
Cancer Research | 2012
Donna P. Frazier; Robert D. Kendig; Fumitake Kai; Dejan Maglic; Takayuki Sugiyama; Rachel L. Morgan; Elizabeth A. Fry; Sarah J. Lagedrost; Guangchao Sui; Kazushi Inoue
The transcription factor Dmp1 is a Ras/HER2-activated haplo-insufficient tumor suppressor that activates the Arf/p53 pathway of cell-cycle arrest. Recent evidence suggests that Dmp1 may activate p53 independently of Arf in certain cell types. Here, we report findings supporting this concept with the definition of an Arf-independent function for Dmp1 in tumor suppression. We found that Dmp1 and p53 can interact directly in mammalian cells via the carboxyl-terminus of p53 and the DNA-binding domain of Dmp1. Expression of Dmp1 antagonized ubiquitination of p53 by Mdm2 and promoted nuclear localization of p53. Dmp1-p53 binding significantly increased the level of p53, independent of the DNA-binding activity of Dmp1. Mechanistically, p53 target genes were activated synergistically by the coexpression of Dmp1 and p53 in p53(-/-);Arf(-/-) cells, and genotoxic responses of these genes were hampered more dramatically in Dmp1(-/-) and p53(-/-) cells than in Arf(-/-) cells. Together, our findings identify a robust new mechanism of p53 activation mediated by direct physical interaction between Dmp1 and p53.
International Journal of Cancer | 2016
Kazushi Inoue; Elizabeth A. Fry; Donna P. Frazier
The tumor suppressor p53 is activated upon cellular stresses such as DNA damage, oncogene activation, hypoxia, which transactivates sets of genes that induce DNA repair, cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, or autophagy, playing crucial roles in the prevention of tumor formation. The central regulator of the p53 pathway is Mdm2 which inhibits transcriptional activity, nuclear localization and protein stability. More than 30 cellular p53‐binding proteins have been isolated and characterized including Mdm2, Mdm4, p300, BRCA1/2, ATM, ABL and 53BP‐1/2. Most of them are nuclear proteins; however, not much is known about p53‐binding transcription factors. In this review, we focus on transcription factors that directly interact with p53/Mdm2 through direct binding including Dmp1, E2F1, YB‐1 and YY1. Dmp1 and YB‐1 bind only to p53 while E2F1 and YY1 bind to both p53 and Mdm2. Dmp1 has been shown to bind to p53 and block all the known functions for Mdm2 on p53 inhibition, providing a secondary mechanism for tumor suppression in Arf‐null cells. Although E2F1‐p53 binding provides a checkpoint mechanism to silence hyperactive E2F1, YB‐1 or YY1 interaction with p53 subverts the activity of p53, contributing to cell cycle progression and tumorigenesis. Thus, the modes and consequences for each protein‐protein interaction vary from the viewpoint of tumor development and suppression.
International Journal of Cancer | 2009
Ali Mallakin; Takayuki Sugiyama; Fumitake Kai; Pankaj Taneja; Robert D. Kendig; Donna P. Frazier; Dejan Maglic; Lauren A. Matise; Mark C. Willingham; Kazushi Inoue
Dmp1 (Dmtf1) encodes a Myb‐like transcription factor implicated in tumor suppression through direct activation of the Arf‐p53 pathway. The human DMP1 gene is frequently deleted in non‐small cell lung cancers, especially those that retain wild‐type INK4a/ARF and/or p53. To identify novel genes that are regulated by Dmp1, transcriptional profiles of lung tissue from Dmp1‐null and wild‐type mice were generated using the GeneChip Microarray. Comparative analysis of gene expression changes between the two groups resulted in identification of numerous genes that may be regulated by Dmp1. Notably, amphiregulin (Areg), thrombospondin‐1 (Tsp‐1), JunB, Egr1, adrenomedullin (Adm), Bcl‐3 and methyl‐CpG binding domain protein 1 (Mbd1) were downregulated in the lungs from Dmp1‐null mice while Gas1 and Ect2 genes were upregulated. These target genes were chosen for further analyses since they are involved in cell proliferation, transcription, angiogenesis/metastasis, apoptosis, or DNA methylation, and thus could account for the tumor suppressor phenotype of Dmp1. Dmp1 directly bound to the genomic loci of Areg, Tsp‐1, JunB and Egr1. Significant upregulation or downregulation of the novel Dmp1 target genes was observed upon transient expression of Dmp1 in alveolar epithelial cells, an effect which was nullified by the inhibition of de novo mRNA synthesis. Interestingly, these genes and their protein products were significantly downregulated or upregulated in the lungs from Dmp1‐heterozygous mice as well. Identification of novel Dmp1 target genes not only provides insights into the effects of Dmp1 on global gene expression, but also sheds light on the mechanism of haploid insufficiency of Dmp1 in tumor suppression.
Expert Review of Molecular Diagnostics | 2008
Takayuki Sugiyama; Donna P. Frazier; Pankaj Taneja; Rachel L. Morgan; Mark C. Willingham; Kazushi Inoue
Lung cancer is the most lethal carcinoma worldwide. Mutations of p53, inactivation of p16INK4a, and overexpression of cyclins E, A and B are independently associated with poor prognoses of patients, while the prognostic value of cyclin D1 or RB expression is inconclusive. Cyclin D binding myb-like protein 1 (Dmp1) encodes a DNA binding protein that receives signals from oncogenic Ras and functions as a tumor suppressor by activating the Arf–p53 pathway. Dmp1 has been shown to be haplo-insufficient for tumor suppression in mouse models including K-ras-mediated lung carcinogenesis. The human DMP1 gene is located on chromosome 7q21, and our recent results revealed that the hDMP1 gene is deleted, but not mutated or silenced, in approximately 40 % of human non-small-cell lung carcinomas. These cases typically retained wild-type ARF and p53 and expressed very low levels of the hDMP1 protein. Thus, hDMP1 loss could be a novel diagnostic marker for non-small-cell lung carcinomas.
Cancer Research | 2008
Kazushi Inoue; Takayuki Sugiyama; Pankaj Taneja; Rachel L. Morgan; Donna P. Frazier
The Ras-activated transcription factor DMP1 can stimulate Arf transcription to promote p53-dependent cell arrest. One recent study deepens the pathophysiologic significance of this pathway in cancer, first, by identifying DMP1 losses in human lung cancers that lack ARF/p53 mutations, and second, by demonstrating that Dmp1 deletions in the mouse are sufficient to promote K-ras-induced lung tumorigenesis via mechanisms consistent with a disruption of Arf/p53 suppressor function. These findings prompt further investigations of the prognostic value of DMP1 alterations in human cancers and the oncogenic events that can cooperate with DMP1 inactivation to drive tumorigenesis.
Clinical Medicine: Oncology | 2008
Takayuki Sugiyama; Donna P. Frazier; Pankaj Taneja; Robert D. Kendig; Rachel L. Morgan; Lauren A. Matise; Sarah J. Lagedrost; Kazushi Inoue
Summary Dmp1 (cyclin D-interacting myb-like protein 1; also called Dmtf1) is a transcription factor that has been isolated in a yeast two-hybrid screen through its binding property to cyclin D2. Dmp1 directly binds to and activates the Arf promoter and induces Arf-p53-dependent cell cycle arrest in primary cells. D-type cyclins usually inhibit Dmp1-mediated transcription in a Cdk-independent fashion; however, Dmp1 shows synergistic effects with D-cyclins on the Arf promoter. Ras or Myc oncogene-induced tumor formation is accelerated in both Dmp1+/- and Dmp1-/- mice with no significant differences between Dmp1+/- and Dmp1-/-. Thus, Dmp1 is haplo-insufficient for tumor suppression. Tumors from Dmp1-/- or Dmp1+/- mice often retain wild-type Arf and p53, suggesting that Dmp1 is a physiological regulator of the Arf-p53 pathway. The Dmp1 promoter is activated by oncogenic Ras-Raf signaling, while it is repressed by physiological mitogenic stimuli, overexpression of E2F proteins, and genotoxic stimuli mediated by NF-κB. The human DMP1 gene (hDMP1) is located on chromosome 7q21 and is hemizygously deleted in approximately 40% of human lung cancers, especially those that retain normal INK4a/ARF and P53 loci. Thus, hDMP1 is clearly involved in human carcinogenesis, and tumors with hDMP1 deletion may constitute a discrete disease entity.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Shuai Tang; Meenu Mishra; Donna P. Frazier; Miranda L. Moore; Kazushi Inoue; Rajendar Deora; Guangchao Sui; Purnima Dubey
Prostate cancer is influenced by epigenetic modification of genes involved in cancer development and progression. Increased expression of Prostate Stem Cell Antigen (PSCA) is correlated with development of malignant human prostate cancer, while studies in mouse models suggest that decreased PSCA levels promote prostate cancer metastasis. These studies suggest that PSCA has context-dependent functions, and could be differentially regulated during tumor progression. In the present study, we identified the multi-functional transcription factor Yin Yang 1 (YY1) as a modulator of PSCA expression in prostate epithelial cell lines. Increased YY1 levels are observed in prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN) and advanced disease. We show that androgen-mediated up-regulation of PSCA in prostate epithelial cell lines is dependent on YY1. We identified two direct YY1 binding sites within the PSCA promoter, and showed that the upstream site inhibited, while the downstream site, proximal to the androgen-responsive element, stimulated PSCA promoter activity. Thus, changes in PSCA expression levels in prostate cancer may at least partly be affected by cellular levels of YY1. Our results also suggest multiple roles for YY1 in prostate cancer which may contribute to disease progression by modulation of genes such as PSCA.