Literature DB >> 12634062

Reversible amyloid formation by the p53 tetramerization domain and a cancer-associated mutant.

Amanda S Lee1, Charles Galea, Enrico L DiGiammarino, Bokkyoo Jun, Gopal Murti, Raul C Ribeiro, Gerard Zambetti, Christian P Schultz, Richard W Kriwacki.   

Abstract

The tetramerization domain for wild-type p53 (p53tet-wt) and a p53 mutant, R337H (p53tet-R337H), associated with adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) in children, can be converted from the soluble native state to amyloid-like fibrils under certain conditions. Circular dichroism, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and staining with Congo red and thioflavin T showed that p53tet-wt and p53tet-R337H adopt an alternative beta-sheet conformation (p53tet-wt-beta and p53tet-R337H-beta, respectively), characteristic of amyloid-like fibrils, when incubated at pH 4.0 and elevated temperatures. Electron micrographs showed that the alternative conformations for p53tet-wt (p53tet-wt-beta) and p53tet-R337H (p53tet-R337H-beta) were supramolecular structures best described as "molecular ribbons". FT-IR analysis demonstrated that the mechanism of amyloid-like fibril formation involved unfolding of the p53tet-wt beta-strands, followed by unfolding of the alpha-helices, followed finally by formation of beta-strand-containing structures that other methods showed were amyloid-like ribbons. The mutant, p53tet-R337H, had a significantly higher propensity to form amyloid-like fibrils. Both p53tet-wt (pH 4.0) and p53tet-R337H (pH 4.0 and 5.0), when incubated at room temperature (22 degrees C) for one month, were converted to molecular ribbons. In addition, p53tet-R337H, and not p53tet-wt, readily formed ribbons at pH 4.0 and 37 degrees C over 20 hours. Interestingly, unlike other amyloid-forming proteins, p53tet-wt-beta and p53tet-R337H-beta disassembled and refolded to the native tetramer conformation when the solution pH was raised from 4.0 to 8.5. Although fibril formation at pH 4.0 was concentration and temperature-dependent, fibril disassembly at pH 8.5 was independent of both. Finally, we propose that the significantly higher propensity of the mutant to form ribbons, compared to the wild-type, may provide a possible mechanism for the observed nuclear accumulation of p53 in ACC cells and other cancerous cells.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12634062     DOI: 10.1016/s0022-2836(03)00175-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Biol        ISSN: 0022-2836            Impact factor:   5.469


  25 in total

1.  Amyloid fibril formation can proceed from different conformations of a partially unfolded protein.

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3.  Acid-denatured small heat shock protein HdeA from Escherichia coli forms reversible fibrils with an atypical secondary structure.

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Review 4.  Potential roles for prions and protein-only inheritance in cancer.

Authors:  H Antony; A P Wiegmans; M Q Wei; Y O Chernoff; K K Khanna; A L Munn
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5.  Childhood adrenocortical tumours: a review.

Authors:  Rosana Marques-Pereira; Luiz Delacerda; Hadriano M Lacerda; Edson Michalkiewicz; Fabiano Sandrini; Romolo Sandrini
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Review 6.  The Inherited p53 Mutation in the Brazilian Population.

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Review 7.  Aggregation and Prion-Like Properties of Misfolded Tumor Suppressors: Is Cancer a Prion Disease?

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8.  Unfolding, aggregation, and amyloid formation by the tetramerization domain from mutant p53 associated with lung cancer.

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9.  The (1-63) region of the p53 transactivation domain aggregates in vitro into cytotoxic amyloid assemblies.

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Review 10.  Ligand binding and hydration in protein misfolding: insights from studies of prion and p53 tumor suppressor proteins.

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