Copyright © 2002 Cell Press.
Molecular Cell, Vol 9, 1031-1044, May 2002

Article

c-Myc Can Induce DNA Damage, Increase Reactive Oxygen Species, and Mitigate p53 Function: A Mechanism for Oncogene-Induced Genetic Instability

Omid Vafa,1 Mark Wade,1 Suzanne Kern,2 Michelle Beeche,1 Tej K. Pandita,3 Garret M. Hampton,2 and Geoffrey M. Wahl1

1The Salk Institute for Biological Studies, La Jolla, CA 92037 USA

2Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation, San Diego, CA 92121 USA

3Center for Radiological Research, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032 USA

u2217Corresponding author
Geoffrey M. Wahl
858-453-4100 x1255 (phone)
858-457-2762 (fax)
wahl@salk.edu


Summary


Oncogene overexpression activates p53 by a mechanism posited to involve uncharacterized hyperproliferative signals. We determined whether such signals produce metabolic perturbations that generate DNA damage, a known p53 inducer. Biochemical, cytological, cell cycle, and global gene expression analyses revealed that brief c-Myc activation can induce DNA damage prior to S phase in normal human fibroblasts. Damage correlated with induction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) without induction of apoptosis. Deregulated c-Myc partially disabled the p53-mediated DNA damage response, enabling cells with damaged genomes to enter the cycle, resulting in poor clonogenic survival. An antioxidant reduced ROS, decreased DNA damage and p53 activation, and improved survival. We propose that oncogene activation can induce DNA damage and override damage controls, thereby accelerating tumor progression via genetic instability.

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