The N terminus of p53 regulates its dissociation from DNA
- PMID: 10993878
- DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M002509200
The N terminus of p53 regulates its dissociation from DNA
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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