43 research outputs found

    Proteolytic cleavage of p53 mutants in response to mismatched DNA

    Get PDF
    Interaction of p53 with mismatched DNA induces proteolytic cleavage with release of a 35-kDa protein fragment from the p53–DNA complexes. The 35-kDa cleavage product is activated for specific biochemical function(s) and may play a role in the cellular response to DNA damage (Molinari et al (1996) Oncogene13: 2077–2086; Okorokov et al (1997) EMBO J16: 6008–6017). In the present study we have asked if mutants of p53 retain the ability to undergo similar proteolytic cleavage, and compared sequence-specific ‘DNA contact’ with ‘structural’ mutants commonly found in human cancer. In addition, a series of phosphorylation site mutants were generated to investigate the possible effects of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation on the proteolytic cleavage of p53. All mutants tested bound to a mismatched DNA target in vitro. Moreover, studies in vitro and in vivo indicate that p53 mutants with intact conformational structure (as determined by immunoreactivity with PAb246 and PAb1620) retain the ability to undergo proteolytic cleavage similar, if not identical, to the wild-type p53 protein. Our results suggest that the capacity for p53 to bind mismatched DNA is independent of structural conformation of the central core domain. Proteolytic cleavage, however, is crucially dependent upon a wild-type conformation of the protein. © 1999 Cancer Research Campaig

    The processing of Holliday junctions by BLM and WRN helicases is regulated by p53.

    Get PDF
    BLM, WRN, and p53 are involved in the homologous DNA recombination pathway. The DNA structure-specific helicases, BLM and WRN, unwind Holliday junctions (HJ), an activity that could suppress inappropriate homologous recombination during DNA replication. Here, we show that purified, recombinant p53 binds to BLM and WRN helicases and attenuates their ability to unwind synthetic HJ in vitro. The p53 248W mutant reduces abilities of both to bind HJ and inhibit helicase activities, whereas the p53 273H mutant loses these abilities. Moreover, full-length p53 and a C-terminal polypeptide (residues 373-383) inhibit the BLM and WRN helicase activities, but phosphorylation at Ser(376) or Ser(378) completely abolishes this inhibition. Following blockage of DNA replication, Ser(15) phospho-p53, BLM, and RAD51 colocalize in nuclear foci at sites likely to contain DNA replication intermediates in cells. Our results are consistent with a novel mechanism for p53-mediated regulation of DNA recombinational repair that involves p53 post-translational modifications and functional protein-protein interactions with BLM and WRN DNA helicases

    Physical and functional interactions between human mitochondrial single-stranded DNA-binding protein and tumour suppressor p53

    Get PDF
    Single-stranded DNA-binding proteins (SSB) form a class of proteins that bind preferentially single-stranded DNA with high affinity. They are involved in DNA metabolism in all organisms and serve a vital role in replication, recombination and repair of DNA. In this report, we identify human mitochondrial SSB (HmtSSB) as a novel protein-binding partner of tumour suppressor p53, in mitochondria. It binds to the transactivation domain (residues 1–61) of p53 via an extended binding interface, with dissociation constant of 12.7 (± 0.7) μM. Unlike most binding partners reported to date, HmtSSB interacts with both TAD1 (residues 1–40) and TAD2 (residues 41–61) subdomains of p53. HmtSSB enhances intrinsic 3′-5′ exonuclease activity of p53, particularly in hydrolysing 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-oxodG) present at 3′-end of DNA. Taken together, our data suggest that p53 is involved in DNA repair within mitochondria during oxidative stress. In addition, we characterize HmtSSB binding to ssDNA and p53 N-terminal domain using various biophysical measurements and we propose binding models for both

    p53 Protein Exhibits 3′-to-5′ Exonuclease Activity

    Get PDF
    AbstractHighly purified p53 protein from different sources was able to degrade DNA with a 3′-to-5′ polarity, yielding deoxynucleoside monophosphates as reaction products. This exonuclease activity was dependent on Mg2+ and inhibited by addition of 5 mM nucleoside monophosphates. This exonuclease activity is intrinsic to the wild-type p53 protein: it copurified with p53 during p53 preparation; only purified wild-type p53, but not identically purified mutant p53 proteins displayed exonuclease activity; the exonuclease activity could be reconstituted from SDS gel-purified and urea-renatured p53 protein and mapped to the core domain of the p53 molecule; and finally, purified p53 protein could be UV cross-linked to GMP. A p53-intrinsic exonuclease activity should substantially extend our view on the role of p53 as a “guardian of the genome.
    corecore