Structural Origin for the Transcriptional Activity of Human p53

  • Lee, Si-Hyung (Protein Engineering Laboratory, Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology) ;
  • Park, Kyu-Hwan (Protein Engineering Laboratory, Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology) ;
  • Kim, Do-Hyung (Protein Engineering Laboratory, Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology) ;
  • Choung, Dong-Ho (Protein Engineering Laboratory, Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology) ;
  • Suk, Jae-Eun (Protein Engineering Laboratory, Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology) ;
  • Kim, Do-Hyung (Department of Life Sciences, Center for Biofunctional Molecules and School of Environmental Engineering, Pohang University of Science and Technology) ;
  • Chang, Jun (Department of Life Sciences, Center for Biofunctional Molecules and School of Environmental Engineering, Pohang University of Science and Technology) ;
  • Sung, Young-Chul (Department of Life Sciences, Center for Biofunctional Molecules and School of Environmental Engineering, Pohang University of Science and Technology) ;
  • Choi, Kwan-Yong (Department of Life Sciences, Center for Biofunctional Molecules and School of Environmental Engineering, Pohang University of Science and Technology) ;
  • Han, Kyou-Hoon (Protein Engineering Laboratory, Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology)
  • Received : 2000.11.01
  • Accepted : 2000.12.18
  • Published : 2001.01.31

Abstract

Transcriptional activation domains are known to be inherently "unstructured" with no tertiary structure. A recent NMR study, however, has shown that the transactivation domain in human p53 is populated with an amphipathic helix and two nascent turns. This suggests that the presence of such local secondary structures within the overall "unstructured" structural framework is a general feature of acidic transactivation domains. These pre-existing local structures in p53, formed selectively by positional conserved hydrophobic residues that are known to be critical for transcriptional activity, thus appear to constitute the specific structural motifs that regulate recognition of the p53 transactivation domain by target proteins. Here, we report the results of a NMR structural comparison between the native human p53 transactivation domain and an inactive mutant (22L,23W$\rightarrow$22R,23S). Results show that the mutant has an identical overall structural topology as the native protein, to the extent that the amphipathic helix formed by the residues 18T 26L within the native p53 transactivating domain is preserved in the double mutant. Therefore, the lack of transcriptional activity in the double mutant should be ascribed to the disruption of the essential hydrophobic contacts between the p53 transactivation domain and target proteins due to the (22L,23W$\rightarrow$22R,23S) mutation.

Keywords