The naked mole-rat is a subterranean rodent, approximately the size of a mouse, renowned for its exceptional longevity (>30 years) and remarkable resistance to cancer. To explore putative mechanisms underlying… Click to show full abstract
The naked mole-rat is a subterranean rodent, approximately the size of a mouse, renowned for its exceptional longevity (>30 years) and remarkable resistance to cancer. To explore putative mechanisms underlying the cancer resistance of the naked mole-rat, we investigated the regulation and function of the most commonly mutated tumor suppressor, TP53 , in the naked mole-rat. We found that the p53 protein in naked mole-rat embryonic fibroblasts (NEFs) exhibits a half-life more than ten times in excess of the protein’s characterized half-life in mouse and human embryonic fibroblasts. We determined that the long half-life of the naked mole-rat p53 protein reflects protein-extrinsic regulation. Relative to mouse and human p53, a larger proportion of naked mole-rat p53 protein is constitutively localized in the nucleus prior to DNA damage. Nevertheless, DNA damage is sufficient to induce activation of canonical p53 target genes in NEFs. Despite the uniquely long half-life and unprecedented basal nuclear localization of p53 in NEFs, naked mole-rat p53 retains its canonical tumor suppressive activity. Together, these findings suggest that the unique stabilization and regulation of the p53 protein may contribute to the naked mole-rat’s remarkable resistance to cancer.
               
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