Identification of p53 as a Sequence-Specific DNA-Binding Protein

Scott E. Kern(Johns Hopkins University), Kenneth W. Kinzler(Johns Hopkins University), Arthur M. Bruskin(Johns Hopkins University), David Jarosz(Johns Hopkins University), Paula N. Friedman(Johns Hopkins University), Carol Prives(Johns Hopkins University), Bert Vogelstein(Johns Hopkins University)
Science
June 21, 1991
Cited by 1,105

Abstract

The tumor-suppressor gene p53 is altered by missense mutation in numerous human malignancies. However, the biochemical properties of p53 and the effect of mutation on these properties are unclear. A human DNA sequence was identified that binds specifically to wild-type human p53 protein in vitro. As few as 33 base pairs were sufficient to confer specific binding. Certain guanines within this 33-base pair region were critical, as methylation of these guanines or their substitution with thymine-abrogated binding. Human p53 proteins containing either of two missense mutations commonly found in human tumors were unable to bind significantly to this sequence. These data suggest that a function of p53 may be mediated by its ability to bind to specific DNA sequences in the human genome, and that this activity is altered by mutations that occur in human tumors.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis