The age-dependent binding of CBP/TK, a CCAAT binding protein, is deregulated in transformed and immortalized mammalian cells but absent in premature aging cells

Jong Hwei Pang, Li Feng Good, Kuang Yu Chen*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

CBP/tk, CCAAT Binding Protein for thymidine kinase, has been shown to bind to the distal and proximal CCAAT elements in human TK gene at G1/S boundary in normal human IMR-90 cells after serum stimulation (Pang and Chen, 1993). We now show that the serum-induced binding activity of CBP/tk was inversely related to the population doubling level (PDL) of the normal IMR-90 cells. However, little or almost no CBP/tk binding activity was observed in cells derived from patients with premature aging syndromes (e.g., Werner, Hutchinson-Gilford, and Cockayne syndrome). In contrast, CBP/tk binding activity in SV-40 virus-transformed human cells and in HeLa cells was overexpressed at levels 5- to 15-fold higher than that in normal cells and appeared to be deregulated. The half-life of CBP/tk binding activity in SV- 40 transformed cells was at least 10 times longer than that in normal IMR-90 cells, suggesting that posttranslational control may contribute to the deregulation. CBP/tk binding activity detected in other mammalian cells such as murine NIH3T3, an immortal cell line, did not reveal any cell cycle dependence either. Further characterization of CBP/tk binding complex indicates that the binding complex may contain NF-YA and NF-YB and that the binding activity was sensitive to oxidizing reagents. Taken together, our data showed that the age- and cell cycle-dependent nature of CBP/tk is a function of cell types and that CBP/tk binding activity may be subjected to posttranslational and redox regulation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)97-109
Number of pages13
JournalExperimental Gerontology
Volume31
Issue number1-2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1996
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • CCAAT binding protein
  • NF-Y
  • cellular senescence
  • normal diploid fibroblasts
  • progeria
  • redox regulation
  • transformed cells

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