The present study shows that DNA damage induces different patterns of p53-dependent and p53-independent apoptosis in epithelial cells of various organs of adult mice. Genotoxic stress induced a biphasic apoptotic response in the small intestine and tongue. While the first immediate apoptotic wave was p53-dependent, the second was slower in rate and was p53-independent. Under the same experimental conditions a single rapid, but a more extended, p53-independent response was evident in the skin of the tail. Indeed, exposure of p53+/+ mice to 400 R induced in epithelium of the small intestine and tongue an immediate rapid response that was followed by a second delayed p53-independent apoptotic wave. p53-/- mice exhibited in these organs the second wave only. However, epithelium of the tail derived from the same mice showed a single rapid apoptotic response that lasted much longer than the p53-dependent response and was similar in the p53-/- and the p53+/+ mice. Variations in apoptotic patterns observed in epithelial cells derived of the different tissues may point to differences in the physiological pathways expressed.
Copyright 1999 Academic Press.