Title of article :
Molecular mechanisms of functional rescue mediated by P53 tumor suppressor mutations Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Yu-Hong Tan، نويسنده , , Y. Morris Chen، نويسنده , , Xiang Ye، نويسنده , , Qiang Lu، نويسنده , , Vira Tretyachenko-Ladokhina، نويسنده , , Wei Yang، نويسنده , , Donald F. Senear، نويسنده , , Ray Luo، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
We have utilized both molecular dynamics simulations and solution biophysical measurements to investigate the rescue mechanism of mutation N235K, which plays a key role in the recently identified global suppressor motif of K235/Y239/R240 in the human p53 DNA-binding domain (DBD). Previous genetic analysis indicates that N235K alone rescues five out of six destabilized cancer mutants. However, the solution biophysical measurement shows that N235K generates only a slight increase to the stability of DBD, implying a rescue mechanism that is not a simple additive contribution to thermodynamic stability. Our molecular simulations show that the N235K substitution generates two non-native salt bridges with residues D186 and E198. We find that the nonnative salt bridges, D186-K235 and E198-K235, and a native salt bridge, E171-R249, are mutually exclusive, thus resulting in only a marginal increase in stability as compared to the wild type protein. When a destabilized V157F is paired with N235K, the native salt bridge E171-R249 is retained. In this context, the non-native salt bridges, D186-K235 and E198-K235, produce a net increase in stability as compared to V157F alone. A similar rescue mechanism may explain how N235K stabilize other highly unstable β-sandwich cancer mutants.
Keywords :
p53 , DNA-binding domain , missense mutation , suppressor mutation , molecular dynamics , protein stability
Journal title :
Biophysical Chemistry
Journal title :
Biophysical Chemistry