11 research outputs found

    Effects of oxidation agents and metal ions on binding of p53 to supercoiled DNA

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    Wild type human full length (f.l.) tumor suppressor p53 protein binds preferentially to supercoiled (sc) DNA in vitro both in the presence and absence of the p53 consensus sequence (p53CON). This binding produces a ladder of retarded bands on the agarose gel. Bands revealed by immunoblotting with antibody DO-1 corresponded to the ethidium stained retarded bands. The intensity and the number of bands of p53-scDNA complex were decreased by physiological concentrations of unchelated zinc ions. Nickel and cobalt ions inhibited binding of p53 to scDNA and to p53CON in linear DNA fragments less efficiently than zinc. Compared to the intrinsic zinc strongly bound to Cys 176, Cys 238, Cys 242 and His 179 in the p53 core domain, binding of additional Zn2+ to p53 was much weaker as shown by an easy removal of the latter ions by low concentrations of EDTA. Oxidation of the protein with diamide resulted in a decrease of the number of the retarded bands. Under the same conditions, no binding of oxidized p53 to p53CON in a linear DNA fragment was observed. In agreement with the literature oxidation of f.l. p53 with diamide was irreversible and was not reverted by an excess of DTT. We showed that in the presence of 0.1 mM zinc ions, oxidation of p53 became reversible. Other divalent cations tested (cadmium, cobalt, nickel) exhibited no such effect. We suggested that the irreversibility of p53 oxidation was due, at least in part, to the removal of intrinsic zinc from its position in the DNA binding domain (after oxidation of the three cysteines to which the zinc ion is coordinated in the reduced protein) accompanied by a change in the p53 conformation. Binding of C-terminal anti-p53 antibody also protected bacterially expressed protein against irreversible loss of activity due to diamide oxidation. Binding the human p53 core domain (segment 94-312) to scDNA greatly differed from that observed with the full-length p53. The core domain did not posses the ability to bind strongly to many sites in scDNA regardless of the presence or absence of p53CON suggesting involvement of some other domain (probably C-terminal) in binding of the full-length p53 to scDNA. Supershift experiments using antibodies against p53 N- or C-terminus suggested that in oxidized p53, scDNA binding through the C-terminus gained importance

    Biophysical and electrochemical studies of protein-nucleic acid interactions

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    This review is devoted to biophysical and electrochemical methods used for studying protein-nucleic acid (NA) interactions. The importance of NA structure and protein-NA recognition for essential cellular processes, such as replication or transcription, is discussed to provide background for description of a range of biophysical chemistry methods that are applied to study a wide scope of protein-DNA and protein-RNA complexes. These techniques employ different detection principles with specific advantages and limitations and are often combined as mutually complementary approaches to provide a complete description of the interactions. Electrochemical methods have proven to be of great utility in such studies because they provide sensitive measurements and can be combined with other approaches that facilitate the protein-NA interactions. Recent applications of electrochemical methods in studies of protein-NA interactions are discussed in detail

    A New Microsphere-Based Immunoassay for Measuring the Activity of Transcription Factors

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    There are several traditional and well-developed methods for analyzing the activity of transcription factors, such as EMSA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and reporter gene activity assays. All of these methods have their own distinct disadvantages, but none can analyze the changes in transcription factors in the few cells that are cultured in the wells of 96-well titer plates. Thus, a new microsphere-based immunoassay to measure the activity of transcription factors (MIA-TF) was developed. In MIA-TF, NeutrAvidin-labeled microspheres were used as the solid phase to capture biotin-labeled double-strand DNA fragments which contain certain transcription factor binding elements. The activity of transcription factors was detected by immunoassay using a transcription factor-specific antibody to monitor the binding with the DNA probe. Next, analysis was performed by flow cytometry. The targets hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) and nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) were applied and detected in this MIA-TF method; the results that we obtained demonstrated that this method could be used to monitor the changes of NF-κB or HIF within 50 or 100 ng of nuclear extract. Furthermore, MIA-TF could detect the changes in NF-κB or HIF in cells that were cultured in wells of a 96-well plate without purification of the nuclear protein, an important consideration for applying this method to high-throughput assays in the future. The development of MIA-TF would support further progress in clinical analysis and drug screening systems. Overall, MIA-TF is a method with high potential to detect the activity of transcription factors

    Effects of oxidation agents and metal ions on binding of p53 to supercoiled DNA

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    Wild type human full length (f.l.) tumor suppressor p53 protein binds preferentially to supercoiled (sc) DNA in vitro both in the presence and absence of the p53 consensus sequence (p53CON). This binding produces a ladder of retarded bands on the agarose gel. Bands revealed by immunoblotting with antibody DO-1 corresponded to the ethidium stained retarded bands. The intensity and the number of bands of p53-scDNA complex were decreased by physiological concentrations of unchelated zinc ions. Nickel and cobalt ions inhibited binding of p53 to scDNA and to p53CON in linear DNA fragments less efficiently than zinc. Compared to the intrinsic zinc strongly bound to Cys 176, Cys 238, Cys 242 and His 179 in the p53 core domain, binding of additional Zn2+ to p53 was much weaker as shown by an easy removal of the latter ions by low concentrations of EDTA. Oxidation of the protein with diamide resulted in a decrease of the number of the retarded bands. Under the same conditions, no binding of oxidized p53 to p53CON in a linear DNA fragment was observed. In agreement with the literature oxidation of f.l. p53 with diamide was irreversible and was not reverted by an excess of DTT. We showed that in the presence of 0.1 mM zinc ions, oxidation of p53 became reversible. Other divalent cations tested (cadmium, cobalt, nickel) exhibited no such effect. We suggested that the irreversibility of p53 oxidation was due, at least in part, to the removal of intrinsic zinc from its position in the DNA binding domain (after oxidation of the three cysteines to which the zinc ion is coordinated in the reduced protein) accompanied by a change in the p53 conformation. Binding of C-terminal anti-p53 antibody also protected bacterially expressed protein against irreversible loss of activity due to diamide oxidation. Binding the human p53 core domain (segment 94-312) to scDNA greatly differed from that observed with the full-length p53. The core domain did not posses the ability to bind strongly to many sites in scDNA regardless of the presence or absence of p53CON suggesting involvement of some other domain (probably C-terminal) in binding of the full-length p53 to scDNA. Supershift experiments using antibodies against p53 N- or C-terminus suggested that in oxidized p53, scDNA binding through the C-terminus gained importance
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