Role of p53 in transcriptional repression of SVCT2

SVCT2, Sodium-dependent Vitamin C Transporter 2, uniquely transports ascorbic acid (also known as vitamin C and ascorbate) into all types of cells. Vitamin C is an essential nutrient that must be obtained through the diet and plasma levels are tightly regulated by transporter activity. Vitamin C pla...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular biology reports 2021-02, Vol.48 (2), p.1651-1658
Hauptverfasser: Kim, Eun Ho, Koh, Dong-In, Ryu, Yea Seong, Park, Sang-Soo, Hong, Seung-Woo, Moon, Jai-Hee, Shin, Jae-Sik, Kim, Mi Jin, Kim, Do Yeon, Hong, Jun Ki, Jeong, Hong-Rae, Yun, Hyeseon, Shin, Joo-Yeon, Kim, Joseph, Park, Yoon Sun, Kim, Dong Min, Jin, Dong-Hoon
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:SVCT2, Sodium-dependent Vitamin C Transporter 2, uniquely transports ascorbic acid (also known as vitamin C and ascorbate) into all types of cells. Vitamin C is an essential nutrient that must be obtained through the diet and plasma levels are tightly regulated by transporter activity. Vitamin C plays an important role in antioxidant defenses and is a cofactor for many enzymes that enable hormone synthesis, oxygen sensing, collagen synthesis and epigenetic pathways. Although SVCT2 has various functions, regulation of its expression/activity remains poorly understood. We found a p53-binding site, within the SVCT2 promoter, using a transcription factor binding-site prediction tool. In this study, we show that p53 can directly repress SVCT2 transcription by binding a proximal- (~−185 to −171 bp) and a distal- (~−1800 to −1787 bp) p53-responsive element (PRE), Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays showed that PRE-bound p53 interacts with the corepressor-histone deacetylase 3 (HDAC3), resulting in deacetylation of histones Ac-H4, at the proximal promoter, resulting in transcriptional silencing of SVCT2 . Overall, our data suggests that p53 is a potent transcriptional repressor of SVCT2 , a critical transporter of diet-derived ascorbic acid, across the plasma membranes of numerous essential tissue cell types.
ISSN:0301-4851
1573-4978
DOI:10.1007/s11033-021-06179-2