Although extensive homology exists between related genes p53 and p73, recent data suggest that the family members have divergent roles. We demonstrate that the differential regulatory roles of p53 family member p73 are highly cell-context and promoter-specific. Full-length p73 expressed in the transformed leukemia cell line Jurkat behaves as a specific dominant negative transcriptional repressor of the cell cycle inhibitor gene p21 and blocks p53-mediated apoptosis. These findings provide evidence for a new mechanism in oncogenesis through which the functional properties of p73 can be altered in an inheritable and cell-specific fashion independent of transcriptional coding.
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Freebern, W. J., Smith, J. L., Chaudhry, S. S., Haggerty, C. M., & Gardner, K. (2003). Novel cell-specific and dominant negative anti-apoptotic roles of p73 in transformed leukemia cells. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(4), 2249–2255. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M208517200