p19 Arf Represses Platelet-Derived Growth Factor Receptor β by Transcriptional and Posttranscriptional Mechanisms

  • Widau R
  • Zheng Y
  • Sung C
  • et al.
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Abstract

In addition to cancer surveillance, p19(Arf) plays an essential role in blocking signals stemming from platelet-derived growth factor receptor β (Pdgfrβ) during eye development, but the underlying mechanisms have not been clear. We now show that without Arf, pericyte hyperplasia in the eye results from enhanced Pdgfrβ-dependent proliferation from embryonic day 13.5 (E13.5) of mouse development. Loss of Arf in the eye increases Pdgfrβ expression. In cultured fibroblasts and pericyte-like cells, ectopic p19(Arf) represses and Arf knockdown enhances the expression of Pdgfrβ mRNA and protein. Ectopic Arf also represses primary Pdgfrβ transcripts and a plasmid driven by a minimal promoter, including one missing the CCAAT element required for high-level expression. p19(Arf) uses both p53-dependent and -independent mechanisms to control Pdgfrβ. In vivo, without p53, Pdgfrβ mRNA is elevated and eye development abnormalities resemble the Arf (-/-) phenotype. However, effects of p53 on Pdgfrβ mRNA do not appear to be due to direct p53 or RNA polymerase II recruitment to the promoter. Although p19(Arf) controls Pdgfrβ mRNA in a p53-dependent manner, it also blunts Pdgfrβ protein expression by blocking new protein synthesis in the absence of p53. Thus, our findings demonstrate a novel capacity for p19(Arf) to control Pdgfrβ expression by p53-dependent and -independent mechanisms involving RNA transcription and protein synthesis, respectively, to promote the vascular remodeling needed for normal vision.

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Widau, R. C., Zheng, Y., Sung, C. Y., Zelivianskaia, A., Roach, L. E., Bachmeyer, K. M., … Skapek, S. X. (2012). p19 Arf Represses Platelet-Derived Growth Factor Receptor β by Transcriptional and Posttranscriptional Mechanisms. Molecular and Cellular Biology, 32(21), 4270–4282. https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.06424-11

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