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. 2000 Dec 22;275(51):39944-53.
doi: 10.1074/jbc.M002509200.

The N terminus of p53 regulates its dissociation from DNA

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The N terminus of p53 regulates its dissociation from DNA

C Cain et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

It is important to gain insight into p53 DNA binding and how it is regulated. By using electrophoretic mobility shift assays and DNase I footprinting, we show that a region within the N terminus of the protein controls the dissociation of p53 from a p53-binding site. When p53 is bound by a number of N-terminal-specific monoclonal antibodies, its rate of dissociation from DNA is reduced, and its ability to protect a cognate site from DNase I digestion is increased. Moreover, greatly reduced dissociation is observed with p53 protein lacking the N-terminal 96 amino acids. By contrast, deletion of the C terminus does not affect p53 dissociation from DNA or DNase I protection. p53 protein expressed in and purified from bacterial cells displays markedly more instability on its consensus DNA-binding site than does p53 produced in insect cells, suggesting that post-translational modifications may affect the stability of the protein. Our results provide evidence that the N terminus of p53 possesses an auto-inhibitory function that is mechanistically different from the inhibitory region at the C terminus.

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