Literature DB >> 11382762

Evidence for a distinct inhibitory factor in the regulation of p53 functional activity.

D Wiederschain1, J Gu, Z M Yuan.   

Abstract

Under normal conditions, tumor suppressor protein p53 exists in the cell in its latent form and is unable to function as a transcription factor. The allosteric model of p53 regulation postulates that the extreme portion of p53 carboxyl terminus (aa 364-393) binds to the core domain of the protein, thereby abrogating specific DNA binding in that region. In this study we propose an alternative mechanism of p53 functional regulation, which involves a separate molecule acting in trans to inhibit p53 transcriptional activity. Through the use of chimeric proteins of p53, p63gamma and p73beta, we show that the extreme COOH-terminal domain of p53 exerts a powerful and specific inhibitory effect on the p73- and p63-driven expression of a reporter gene. Moreover, fusion of p53 extreme COOH terminus to a completely unrelated transcriptional activator Gal4-VP16 also results in significant inhibition of transactivation activity. Since p73, p63, or Gal4-VP16 cannot associate with any part of the p53 molecule, we conclude that p53(aa 364-393) represses transcriptional activity of chimeric proteins and p53 itself through the binding of external negative modulator(s) in that region and not by the allosteric mechanism of regulation. In accordance with the "distinct inhibitor" hypothesis, the activity of wild type p53 is substantially increased by overexpression of chimeric proteins bearing p53(aa 364-393), which might be due to the competitive removal of transcriptional inhibitor(s). Our findings provide the basis for the identification of such negative modulators of p53 transcriptional activity.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11382762     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M102400200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  2 in total

1.  HDMX-L is expressed from a functional p53-responsive promoter in the first intron of the HDMX gene and participates in an autoregulatory feedback loop to control p53 activity.

Authors:  Anna Phillips; Amina Teunisse; Suzanne Lam; Kirsten Lodder; Matthew Darley; Muhammad Emaduddin; Anja Wolf; Julia Richter; Job de Lange; Matty Verlaan-de Vries; Kristiaan Lenos; Anja Böhnke; Frank Bartel; Jeremy P Blaydes; Aart G Jochemsen
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2010-07-20       Impact factor: 5.157

2.  P53 and p73 differ in their ability to inhibit glucocorticoid receptor (GR) transcriptional activity.

Authors:  Lili Zhang; Linghu Nie; Carl G Maki
Journal:  Mol Cancer       Date:  2006-12-06       Impact factor: 27.401

  2 in total

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