Title of article
Structural Distortion of p53 by the Mutation R249S and its Rescue by a Designed Peptide: Implications for “Mutant Conformation”
Author/Authors
Assaf Friedler، نويسنده , , Brian S. DeDecker، نويسنده , , Stefan M.V. Freund، نويسنده , , CAROLINE BLAIR، نويسنده , , Stefan Rüdiger، نويسنده , , Alan R. Fersht، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
10
From page
187
To page
196
Abstract
Missense mutations in the DNA-binding core domain of the tumour suppressor protein p53 are frequent in cancer. Many of them result in loss of native structure. The mutation R249S is one of the six most common cancer-associated p53 mutations (“hot-spots”). As it is highly frequent in hepatocellular carcinoma, its rescue is an important therapeutic target. We have used NMR techniques to study the structural effects of the R249S mutation. The overall fold of the core domain is retained in R249S, and it does not take up a denatured “mutant conformation”. However, the β-sandwich had increased flexibility and, according to changes in chemical shift, there was local distortion throughout the DNA-binding interface. It is likely that the R249S mutation resulted in an ensemble of native and native-like conformations in a dynamic equilibrium. The peptide FL-CDB3 that was designed to rescue mutants of p53 by binding specifically to its native structure was found to revert the chemical shifts of R249S back towards the wild-type values and so reverse the structural effects of mutation. We discuss the implications for a rescue strategy and also for the analysis of antibody-binding data.
Keywords
Peptide , p53 , Mutant , cancer , NMR
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number
1243358
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