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Supplementary Information Cells Human Osteosarcoma U-2 OS cells and Saos-2 cells, human non-small-cell lung carcinoma H1299 cells, MCF-7 breast adenocarcinoma cells and human foreskin fibroblasts were maintained at 5% CO2 in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (Cambrex) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) (Perbio), 1% penicillinstreptomycin (Cambrex), and 1% L-glutamine (Cambrex). MCF10A cells were cultured in a 1:1 mix of Hams Nutrient Mixture F12 (Cambrex) and DMEM supplemented with 5% FBS, 10 g/ml insulin (Sigma), 20ng/ml Epidermal Growth Factor (Sigma), 5g/ml hydrocortisone (Sigma) and penicillin/streptomycin/L-glutamine as above. U-2 OS cells containing stably transfected p53 and p52 RNAi or control plasmids were created as follows. U-2 OS cells were plated onto 3.5cm dishes to achieve 50% confluency. The next day cells were transfected, with 1.5µg of pSilencer plasmids (Ambion) expressing either p53 or control siRNAs, using GeneJuice transfection reagent (Novagen) according to manufacturers instructions. 48 hours post transfection cells were selected with hygromycin B. Cells were continously cultured in the presence of 200µg/ml of hygromycin B to maintain selection. Cells used in Fig. 8 were from a pool of stable clones. Data shown in Figure 10 is from a purified clone of cells and is repreentative of data from two independently derived clones of p52 siRNA expressing cells. H1299 cells containing stably transfected p53 (H1299w/tp53) have been described previously (Rocha et al., 2003) and were grown in the presence of 400 µg/ml of hygromycin B and 400 µg/ml of G418. Induction of p53 was achieved by treating cells with 100 µM IPTG (Melford Laboratories) for the indicated times. 1 Plasmids p21 luciferase plasmids were obtained from David Gillespie (Beatson Cancer Institute, Glasgow) and were originally from the Xiao-Fan Wang laboratory (Duke University). DR5 luciferase plasmids were obtained from Toshiyuki Sakai (Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine) and Spencer Gibson (University of Manitoba). The p53 deletion plasmids used for in vitro translation (Supp. Fig. 2B) were provided by Professor David Lane (Dundee). p52 RNAi, p53 RNAi and control plasmids used in transient transfection experiments were generated using the pBS-U6 plasmid (Girdwood et al., 2003) digested with BamH1 (5’) and HindIII (3’) with the appropriate oligo ligated in. p53 RNAi and control plasmids used to generate stable cell lines were created using the pSilencer plasmid (Ambion) using a 5’ BamH1 site and a 3’ HindIII site. RSV p52 and RSV p100 expression plasmids have been described previously (Rocha et al., 2003). The GFP-p52, HA-p52 and HA-p52-DBM plasmids were created in pEGFP (Living colours, Clontech) and pCMV5 HA respectively, by Adel Ibrahim and Mark Peggie of the University of Dundee School of Life Sciences cloning service. Antibodies Antibodies used were: anti-p53 DO-1 and anti-HA tag (12CA5) (Cancer Research-UK), anti-phospho-Ser-15 p53 (9284, New England Biolabs), anti-p21 (sc-397, Santa Cruz), anti-p52 monoclonal and anti-p52 polyclonal (05-361 & 06-413, Upstate Biotechnology), anti-p52 polyclonal (sc-848, Santa Cruz), anti-p50 NF-B (06-886, Upstate Biotechnology), anti-RelA (sc-372, Santa Cruz), anti-Bcl-3 (sc-185, Santa Cruz), anti-actin (A5441, Sigma), anti-Mdm2/Hdm2 (OP46, Calbiochem), anti-Cyclin D1 (556470, BD Pharmingen) and anti-GFP (1181446001, Roche). The anti-c-Rel and anti-RelB antibodies were provided by Nancy Rice, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, Md, USA. 2 Antibodies used in ChIP assays were anti-p52 polyclonal (sc-848, Santa Cruz), anti-p53 DO-1 (Cancer Research-UK), anti-Acetyl histone H3 (06-599, Upstate Biotechnology), anti-Gal4 (sc-510, Santa Cruz), anti-p300 (554215, BD Pharmingen) and anti-HDAC1 (06-720, Upstate Biotechnology). Caspase 3 assays Caspase 3 assays were performed using the CASPACE kit from Promega and were performed according to manufacturers instructions. Flow cytometric analysis of cell cycle distribution. Adherent and detached cells were harvested, pooled, washed once in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), and fixed in ice-cold 70% (vol/vol) ethanol in distilled water. Cells were then washed twice in PBS (plus 1% (wt/vol) bovine serum albumin) and resuspended in PBS containing 0.1% (vol/vol) Triton X-100, 50 µg of propidium iodide per ml and 50 µg of RNase A per ml. After incubation at room temperature for 20 min, cells were analyzed for cell cycle distribution with a FACS Calibur flow cytometer (fluorescenceactivated cell sorter; FACS) and CellQuest software (Becton Dickinson). Red fluorescence (585 ± 42 nm) was evaluated on a linear scale, and pulse width analysis was used to exclude cell doublets and aggregates from the analysis. Cells with a DNA content between 2N and 4N were designated as being in the G1, S, or G2/M phase of the cell cycle. The number of cells in each compartment of the cell cycle was expressed as a percentage of the total number of cells present. Chromatin Immunoprecipitation (ChIP) Cells were grown to 70% confluency and cross-linked with 1% formaldehyde at room temperature for 10 min. Glycine was added to a final concentration of 0.125M for 5 mins at room temperature. Cells were washed twice with 10 ml of ice-cold phosphate-buffered 3 saline and then scraped into 2 mls ice cold harvest buffer (PBS, 1mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), 1 g/ml leupeptin, 1 g/ml aprotinin) before being centrifuged at 1000rpm in an Avanti benchtop centrifuge at 4°C for 10 minutes. The supernatant was removed and the pellet was resuspended in 0.5 ml of lysis buffer (1% SDS, 10 mM EDTA, 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.1, 1 mM PMSF, 1 g/ml leupeptin, 1 g/ml aprotinin) and left on ice for 10 minutes. Samples were then sonicated at 4°C seven times. Each sonication was for 20 seconds with a 1 minute gap between each sonication. Supernatants were recovered by centrifugation at 12,000 rpm in an eppendorf microfuge for 10 min at 4°C before being diluted 10 fold in dilution buffer (1% Triton X100, 2 mM EDTA, 150 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.1). Samples were then precleared for 2 hours at 4°C with 2 g of sheared salmon sperm DNA and 20 l of protein A-Sepharose (50% slurry). At this stage, 10% of the material was kept and stored at – 20°C as Input material. Immunoprecipitations were performed overnight with specific antibodies (3g), with the addition of BRIJ-35 detergent to a final concentration of 0.1%. The immune complexes were captured by incubation with 30 l of protein A-Sepharose (50% slurry) and 2 g salmon sperm DNA for 1 hour at 4°C. The immunoprecipitates were washed sequentially for 5 minutes each at 4°C in Wash Buffer 1 (0.1% SDS, 1% Triton X-100, 2 mM EDTA, 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.1, 150 mM NaCl), Wash Buffer 2 (0.1% SDS, 1% Triton X-100, 2 mM EDTA, 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.1, 500 mM NaCl), and Wash Buffer 3 (0.25 M LiCl, 1% Nonidet P-40, 1% deoxycholate, 1 mM EDTA, 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.1). Beads were washed twice with Tris borate-EDTA (TBE) buffer and eluted with 100 l of Elution Buffer (1% SDS, 0.1 M NaHCO3). For Re-ChIP experiments 25µl of ReChIP buffer (Dilution Buffer, 10mM DTT) was added to beads following washes and incubated at 37°C for 30 minutes. The sample was then diluted 40 times in dilution buffer and immunoprecipitations, washes and elution were performed as before. 4 To reverse the crosslinks, samples, including 'Input', were incubated in 0.2M NaCl at 65 °C overnight. Supernatants were then incubated for 1 hour at 45°C with Proteinase K (20 g each), 40mM Tris-HCl pH6.5, and 10mM EDTA. DNA was cleaned up using PCR Purification columns (Qiagen) according to manufacturers instructions. 5l of DNA was used from a 50µl DNA preparation and subjected to 35 cycles of PCR amplifications (apart from Figure 7 where 10l was used). Control regions for each gene were subjected to 40 cycles of PCR Amplification. For the experiments in Figure 9, U-2OS cells on a 15cm dish were transfected using Genejuice with 10g of HA, HA-p52 or HA-p52-DBM plasmids. After 48 hours, cells were harvested and processed as above for ChIP analysis. Primers and oligonucleotides Semi-Quantitative PCR Cyclin D1 sense CCATTCCCTTGACTGCCCGAG Cyclin D1 antisense GACCAGCCTCTTCCTCCAC Chk1 sense CCTTTGTGGAAGACTGGGACTTGG Chk1 antisense CATCTTGTTCAACAAACGCTGACG DR5 sense GCGCCCACAAAATACACCGACGAT DR5 antisense GCAGCGCAAGCAGAAAAGGAG Gadd45 sense TGCTCAGCAAAGCCCTGAGT Gadd45 antisense GCAGGCACAACACCACGTTA p21 sense CCTGGGACCTCACCTGCTCTGCTG p21 antisense GCAGAAGATGTAGAGCGGGCCTTT p53 sense CCCAAGCAATGGATGATTTGA p53 antisense GGCATTCTGGGAGCTTCATCT Puma sense CAGACTGTGAATCCTGTGCT Puma antisense ACAGTATCTTACAGGCTGGG Bcl3 sense TCAAGAACTGCCACAACGACAC Bcl3 antisense GCAGATCTTGGACTCATGAGG NFKB1 sense TCCCATGGTGGACTACCTGG NFKB1 antisense ATAGGCAAGGTCAAGGTGC NFKB2 sense AAGGACATGACTGCCCAATTTAAC NFKB2 antisense ATCATGGATGGGCTGGGAGG RelA sense CTCGGTGGGGATGAGATCTTC RelA antisense CCGGTGACGATCGTCTGTATC RelB sense CATCGAGCTCCGGGATTGT 5 RelB antisense CTTCAGGGACCCAGCGTTGTA c-rel sense AGAGGGGAATGCGTTTTAGATACA c-rel antisense CAGGGAGAAAAACTTGAAAACACA GAPDH sense GGTCGTATTGGGCGCCTGGTCACC GAPDH antisense CACACCCATGACGAACATGGGGGC ChIP primers CyclinD1 sense TCCCATTCTCTGCCGGGCTTTGATC CyclinD1 antisense GCTGGTGTTCCATGGCTGGGGC p21 sense GTGGCTCTGATTGGCTTTCTGGCC p21 antisense CAGCCCTGTCGCAAGGATCCTGCTGG p21 control sense GATGGCTATGTCGGTGAAGCTC p21 control antisense CCTTTGGCCACACTGAGGAATG Chk1 sense AAGCTCCAACATAAACTGCTCGCTTTC Chk1 antisense GTGCTTTGTAAACCTCAGAGTGGGGTACT Chk1 control sense GGGGAGTTCCGTGTGGAC Chk1 control antisense ACTGGCTTCTGTGTAAACCTGTCC DR5 sense GATCTACTTTAAGGGCTGAAACCCACGG DR5 antisense GGCGACAACGAGCACAAGGGTCTTGGG DR5 control sense TCCGAACACATCCGAACATCAG DR5 control antisense TCCCTGCACCCTTGCTACACTTAG Gadd45 sense GGATCTGTGGTAGGTGAGGGTCAGG Gadd45 antisense GGAATTAGTCACGGGAGGCAGTGCAG Gadd45 control sense GGAGTTGGAGTTGTCAGGAAAAAGGG Gadd45 control antisense GGTTGTGGTCTTTCAGGCCTCCACACC Puma sense GGAGGAAAGCTGAGGAGTTCCCAATGTTGC Puma antisense CTTACTGGGTCTCACCCAATCGCAATCGCC Puma control sense GTGTAAGTGTGAGCCCCATCAG Puma control antisense ACCCCCAGCGATGCGTAC GAPDH sense CGGTGCGTGCCCAGTTG GAPDH antisense GCGACGCAAAAGAAGATG siRNA sequences (upper strand only is shown) Control CAGUCGCGUUUGCGACUGG p52/p100_A (129) CAGCCUAAGCAGAGAGGCU p52/p100_B (249) CUACGAGGGACCAGCCAAG p52/p100_C (887) GAUGAAGAUUGAGCGGCCU p50/p105 GGGGCUAUAAUCCUGGACU RelB UUGGAGAUCAUCGACGAGU Bcl-3 CAACCUACGGCAGACACCG p53 GACUCCAGUGGUAAUCUAC Cyclin D1 UGUGUGCAGAAGGAGGUCTT 6 Oligonucleotides used for siRNA plasmids – sequences in italics and underlined are RNAi sequence Control sense GATCCCCAACAGTCGCGTTTGCGACTGGTTCAAGAGACCAGTCGCAAACGCGAC TGTTTTTTTGGAAA Control antisense AGCTTTTCCAAAAAAACAGTCGCGTTTGCGACTGGTCTCTTGAACCAGTCGCAA ACGCGACTGTTGGG p52/p100_1 sense GATCCCCAACAGCCTAAGCAGAGAGGCTTTCAAGAGAAGCCTCTCTGCTTAGGC TGTTTTTTTGGAAA p52/p100_1 antisense AGCTTTTCCAAAAAAACAGCCTAAGCAGAGAGGCTTCTCTTGAAAGCCTCTCTG CTTAGGCTGTTGGG p52/p100_2 sense GATCCCCAACTACGAGGGACCAGCCAAGTTCAAGAGACTTGGCTGGTCCCTCGT AGTTTTTTTGGAAA p52/p100_2 antisense AGCTTTTCCAAAAAAACTACGAGGGACCAGCCAAGTCTCTTGAACTTGGCTGGT CCCTCGTAGTTGGG p52/p100_3 sense GATCCCCAAGATGAAGATTGAGCGGCCTTTCAAGAGAAGGCCGCTCAATCTTCAT CTTTTTTTGGAAA p52/p100_3 antisense AGCTTTTCCAAAAAAAGATGAAGATTGAGCGGCCTTCTCTTGAAAGGCCGCTCA ATCTTCATCTTGGG p53 sense GATCCCCAAGACTCCAGTGGTAATCTACTTCAAGAGAGTAGATTACCACTGGAGT CTTTTTTTGGAAA p53 antisense AGCTTTTCCAAAAAAAGACTCCAGTGGTAATCTACTCTCTTGAAGTAGATTACCA CTGGAGTCTGGG References Girdwood, D., Bumpass, D., Vaughan, O. A., Thain, A., Anderson, L. A., Snowden, A. W., Garcia-Wilson, E., Perkins, N. D., and Hay, R. T. (2003). p300 transcriptional repression is mediated by SUMO modification. Mol Cell 11: 1043-1054. Rocha, S., Martin, A. M., Meek, D. W., and Perkins, N. D. (2003). p53 Represses cyclin D1 transcription through down regulation of Bcl-3 and inducing increased association of the p52 NF-B subunit with histone deacetylase 1. Mol Cell Biol 23: 4713-4727. 7