MDM2 (transformed mouse 3T3 cell double minute 2, p53 binding protein)
2006-12-01 Wenrui Duan  , Miguel A Villalona-Calero   AffiliationComprehensive Cancer Center, 1230 JCHRI, 300 West 10th Ave, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA
Identity
HGNC
LOCATION
12q15
LOCUSID
ALIAS
ACTFS,HDMX,LSKB,hdm2
FUSION GENES
DNA/RNA
Description
The gene encompasses 33 kb of DNA; 12 exons.
Transcription
2.3 kb nucleotides mRNA. 1476 b open reading frame.
Proteins
Description
491 amino acids; 90 kDa protein.
Expression
Expression of MDM2 during embryogenesis was studied in mice. During 14.5 to 18.5 days of prenatal development, the nasal respiratory epithelium expresses high levels of MDM2 RNA and protein in both wild type and p53 null embryos. MDM2 expression during development is tissue-specific and is independent of p53. The mdm2 basal mRNA expression appears relatively moderate in most organs in adult mice.
MDM2 gene was overexpressed in some types of leukemias and lymphomas. Overexpression was significantly more frequent in the low-grade type of B-cell non-Hodgkins lymphoma (B-NHL) than in the intermediate/high grade types of lymphoma and the overexpression was also significantly more frequent in the advanced rather than the earlier stages of B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL).
MDM2 gene was overexpressed in some types of leukemias and lymphomas. Overexpression was significantly more frequent in the low-grade type of B-cell non-Hodgkins lymphoma (B-NHL) than in the intermediate/high grade types of lymphoma and the overexpression was also significantly more frequent in the advanced rather than the earlier stages of B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL).
Localisation
MDM2 protein was found in nucleus and cytoplasm.
Function
MDM2 was originally cloned from transformed Balb/c3T3 cell line called 3T3DM and was identified as an amplified oncogene in murine cell lines. MDM2 was shown to be amplified in approximately 30% of osteosarcomas and soft tissue tumors and was subsequently found to act as an ubiquitin ligase promoting proteasome dependent degradation of p53. MDM2 is also a transcriptional target of p53 such that p53 activity controls the expression and protein level of its own negative regulator, providing for an elegant feedback loop. MDM2 inhibits the G1 arrest and apoptosis functions of the p53 tumor suppressor protein. The MDM2-p53 complex also inhibits p53 mediated transactivation.
MDM2 knockout mouse embryos died during development and deletion of the p53 gene rescues MDM2 null embryos. These studies suggested that p53 is lethal in the absence of MDM2 during mouse development and MDM2 is a critical regulator to control p53 activity.
In addition, MDM2 involves nuclear export of p53 protein. Interaction between the p53 and MDM2 is not sufficient to mediate p53 degradation. The p53 MDM2 complex must be shuttled from the nucleus to the cytoplasm in order for p53 degradation.
Besides, the MDM2 protein also promotes RB (retinoblastoma) protein degradation in a proteasome-dependent manner in human tumor cell lines. MDM2 overexpression contributes to cancer development in part by destabilizing RB.
Interaction between MDM2 and the tumor suppressor genes p53 and Rb lead to deregulate cell proliferation and apoptosis. MDM2 is a key factor in human tumorigenesis.
Both MDM2 and Pirh2 (RCHY1) proteins are p53 ubiquitin-protein E3 ligases promoting for degradation of p53 protein. However, MDM2 operates in a distinct manner from Pirh2 in response to DNA damage in cancer cells. MDM2 protein is reduced or absent in the p53 null cells compared to the p53 positive cells, Whereas, Pirh2 expression is not affected by the status of p53.
A single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP309) found in the MDM2 promoter is shown to increase the affinity of the transcriptional activator Sp1, resulting in higher levels of MDM2 RNA and protein and the subsequent attenuation of the p53 pathway. In humans, SNP309 is shown to associate with accelerated tumor formation in both hereditary and sporadic cancers.
MDM2 knockout mouse embryos died during development and deletion of the p53 gene rescues MDM2 null embryos. These studies suggested that p53 is lethal in the absence of MDM2 during mouse development and MDM2 is a critical regulator to control p53 activity.
In addition, MDM2 involves nuclear export of p53 protein. Interaction between the p53 and MDM2 is not sufficient to mediate p53 degradation. The p53 MDM2 complex must be shuttled from the nucleus to the cytoplasm in order for p53 degradation.
Besides, the MDM2 protein also promotes RB (retinoblastoma) protein degradation in a proteasome-dependent manner in human tumor cell lines. MDM2 overexpression contributes to cancer development in part by destabilizing RB.
Interaction between MDM2 and the tumor suppressor genes p53 and Rb lead to deregulate cell proliferation and apoptosis. MDM2 is a key factor in human tumorigenesis.
Both MDM2 and Pirh2 (RCHY1) proteins are p53 ubiquitin-protein E3 ligases promoting for degradation of p53 protein. However, MDM2 operates in a distinct manner from Pirh2 in response to DNA damage in cancer cells. MDM2 protein is reduced or absent in the p53 null cells compared to the p53 positive cells, Whereas, Pirh2 expression is not affected by the status of p53.
A single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP309) found in the MDM2 promoter is shown to increase the affinity of the transcriptional activator Sp1, resulting in higher levels of MDM2 RNA and protein and the subsequent attenuation of the p53 pathway. In humans, SNP309 is shown to associate with accelerated tumor formation in both hereditary and sporadic cancers.
Homology
The MDM2 gene has been identified in various organisms including mammals, amphibians and fishes. It belongs to the ring finger ubiquitin protein E3 ligase family, containing Conserved RING-finger Domain.
Mutations
Note
MDM2 mutations are uncommon. Point mutations were reported in human cancers.
Implicated in
Entity name
Soft tissue tumors and osteosarcomas.
Disease
A set of data of MDM2 amplification based on 3889 samples from tumors or xenografts from 28 tumor types from previously published sources was collected. The overall frequency of MDM2 amplification in these human tumors was 7%. Gene amplification was observed in 19 tumor types, with the highest frequency observed in soft tissue tumors (20%), osteosarcomas (16%) and esophageal carcinomas (13%).
Oncogenesis
MDM2 is amplified in many cancers. Because the MDM2 is an ubiquitin-protein ligase that promotes p53 protein degradation, the increased MDM2 protein could play an important role in tumorigenesis, especially in the development of soft tissue tumors, osteosarcomas and esophageal carcinomas.
Article Bibliography
| Pubmed ID | Last Year | Title | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8440237 | 1993 | mdm2 expression is induced by wild type p53 activity. | Barak Y et al |
| 15550242 | 2004 | A single nucleotide polymorphism in the MDM2 promoter attenuates the p53 tumor suppressor pathway and accelerates tumor formation in humans. | Bond GL et al |
| 3474784 | 1987 | Molecular analysis and chromosomal mapping of amplified genes isolated from a transformed mouse 3T3 cell line. | Cahilly-Snyder L et al |
| 8146175 | 1994 | Interactions between p53 and MDM2 in a mammalian cell cycle checkpoint pathway. | Chen CY et al |
| 8628312 | 1996 | mdm-2 inhibits the G1 arrest and apoptosis functions of the p53 tumor suppressor protein. | Chen J et al |
| 16934800 | 2006 | Differential response between the p53 ubiquitin-protein ligases Pirh2 and MdM2 following DNA damage in human cancer cells. | Duan W et al |
| 2026149 | 1991 | Tumorigenic potential associated with enhanced expression of a gene that is amplified in a mouse tumor cell line. | Fakharzadeh SS et al |
| 9819415 | 1998 | Nuclear export is required for degradation of endogenous p53 by MDM2 and human papillomavirus E6. | Freedman DA et al |
| 9153395 | 1997 | Mdm2 promotes the rapid degradation of p53. | Haupt Y et al |
| 9450543 | 1997 | Oncoprotein MDM2 is a ubiquitin ligase E3 for tumor suppressor p53. | Honda R et al |
| 7477327 | 1995 | Rescue of embryonic lethality in Mdm2-deficient mice by absence of p53. | Jones SN et al |
| 9153396 | 1997 | Regulation of p53 stability by Mdm2. | Kubbutat MH et al |
| 9651526 | 1998 | MDM2 expression during mouse embryogenesis and the requirement of p53. | Léveillard T et al |
| 9671804 | 1998 | The MDM2 gene amplification database. | Momand J et al |
| 1535557 | 1992 | The mdm-2 oncogene product forms a complex with the p53 protein and inhibits p53-mediated transactivation. | Momand J et al |
| 7477326 | 1995 | Rescue of early embryonic lethality in mdm2-deficient mice by deletion of p53. | Montes de Oca Luna R et al |
| 1614537 | 1992 | Amplification of a gene encoding a p53-associated protein in human sarcomas. | Oliner JD et al |
| 8479525 | 1993 | Oncoprotein MDM2 conceals the activation domain of tumour suppressor p53. | Oliner JD et al |
| 8265599 | 1993 | The mdm-2 gene is induced in response to UV light in a p53-dependent manner. | Perry ME et al |
| 9227342 | 1997 | Point mutations and nucleotide insertions in the MDM2 zinc finger structure of human tumours. | Schlott T et al |
| 16337594 | 2005 | MDM2 promotes proteasome-dependent ubiquitin-independent degradation of retinoblastoma protein. | Sdek P et al |
| 10359817 | 1999 | P19(ARF) stabilizes p53 by blocking nucleo-cytoplasmic shuttling of Mdm2. | Tao W et al |
| 9172803 | 1996 | Overexpression of the MDM2 oncogene in leukemia and lymphoma. | Watanabe T et al |
Other Information
Locus ID:
NCBI: 4193
MIM: 164785
HGNC: 6973
Ensembl: ENSG00000135679
Variants:
dbSNP: 4193
ClinVar: 4193
TCGA: ENSG00000135679
COSMIC: MDM2
RNA/Proteins
Expression (GTEx)
Pathways
Protein levels (Protein atlas)
PharmGKB
| Entity ID | Name | Type | Evidence | Association | PK | PD | PMIDs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PA164713176 | Platinum compounds | Chemical | ClinicalAnnotation | associated | PD | 29662106 | |
| PA165290931 | nutlin-3 | Chemical | MultilinkAnnotation | associated | 14704432 | ||
| PA36679 | TP53 | Gene | MultilinkAnnotation | associated | 14704432 | ||
| PA443622 | Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung | Disease | ClinicalAnnotation | associated | PD | 29662106 | |
| PA445062 | Neoplasms | Disease | MultilinkAnnotation | associated | 14704432 |
References
| Pubmed ID | Year | Title | Citations |
|---|---|---|---|
| 37981069 | 2024 | CircFSCN1 induces tumor progression and triggers epithelial-mesenchymal transition in bladder cancer through augmentation of MDM2-mediated p53 silencing. | 1 |
| 38104352 | 2024 | MDM2-p53 in liposarcoma: The need for targeted therapies with novel mechanisms of action. | 2 |
| 38134636 | 2024 | MDM2-p53 mediate a miR-181c-3p/LIF axis to regulate low dose-rate radiation-induced DNA damage in human B lymphocytes. | 0 |
| 38200609 | 2024 | TrkA promotes MDM2-mediated AGPS ubiquitination and degradation to trigger prostate cancer progression. | 0 |
| 38263255 | 2024 | MDM2 provides TOP2 poison resistance by promoting proteolysis of TOP2βcc in a p53-independent manner. | 0 |
| 38396916 | 2024 | Association of MDM2 Overexpression in Ameloblastomas with MDM2 Amplification and BRAF(V600E) Expression. | 1 |
| 38519029 | 2024 | FOXO1 promotes cancer cell growth through MDM2-mediated p53 degradation. | 3 |
| 39047034 | 2024 | Induction of the Mdm2 gene and protein by kinase signaling pathways is repressed by the pVHL tumor suppressor. | 0 |
| 37981069 | 2024 | CircFSCN1 induces tumor progression and triggers epithelial-mesenchymal transition in bladder cancer through augmentation of MDM2-mediated p53 silencing. | 1 |
| 38104352 | 2024 | MDM2-p53 in liposarcoma: The need for targeted therapies with novel mechanisms of action. | 2 |
| 38134636 | 2024 | MDM2-p53 mediate a miR-181c-3p/LIF axis to regulate low dose-rate radiation-induced DNA damage in human B lymphocytes. | 0 |
| 38200609 | 2024 | TrkA promotes MDM2-mediated AGPS ubiquitination and degradation to trigger prostate cancer progression. | 0 |
| 38263255 | 2024 | MDM2 provides TOP2 poison resistance by promoting proteolysis of TOP2βcc in a p53-independent manner. | 0 |
| 38396916 | 2024 | Association of MDM2 Overexpression in Ameloblastomas with MDM2 Amplification and BRAF(V600E) Expression. | 1 |
| 38519029 | 2024 | FOXO1 promotes cancer cell growth through MDM2-mediated p53 degradation. | 3 |
Citation
Wenrui Duan ; Miguel A Villalona-Calero
MDM2 (transformed mouse 3T3 cell double minute 2, p53 binding protein)
Atlas Genet Cytogenet Oncol Haematol. 2006-12-01
Online version: http://atlasgeneticsoncology.org/gene/115/mdm2-(transformed-mouse-3t3-cell-double-minute-2-p53-binding-protein)
