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Conformational and molecular basis for induction of apoptosis by a p53 C-terminal peptide in human cancer cells

  • Arianna L. Kim
  • , Anthony J. Raffo
  • , Paul W. Brandt-Rauf
  • , Matthew R. Pincus
  • , Regina Monaco
  • , Patricio Abarzua
  • , Robert L. Fine
  • Columbia University
  • VA Medical Center
  • SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University
  • Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

114 Scopus citations

Abstract

A p53-derived C-terminal peptide induced rapid apoptosis in breast cancer cell lines carrying endogenous p53 mutations or overexpressed wild- type (wt) p53 but was not toxic to nonmalignant human cell lines containing wt p53. Apoptosis occurred through a Fas/APO-1 signaling pathway involving increased extracellular levels of Fas/FasL in the absence of protein synthesis, as well as activation of a Fas/APO-1-specific protease, FLICE. The peptide activity was p53-dependent, and it had no effect in three tumor cell lines with null p53. Furthermore, the C-terminal peptide bound to p53 protein in cell extracts. Thus, p53-dependent, Fas/APO-1 mediated apoptosis can be induced in breast cancer cells with mutant p53 similar to the recently described Fas/APO-1 induced apoptosis by wt p53. However, mutant p53 without p53 peptide does not induce a Fas/APO-1 activation or apoptosis. Docking of the computed low energy conformations for the C-terminal peptide with those for a recently defined proline-rich regulatory region from the N-terminal domain of p53 suggests a unique low energy complex between the two peptide domains. The selective and rapid induction of apoptosis in cancer cells carrying p53 abnormalities may lead to a novel therapeutic modality.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)34924-34931
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume274
Issue number49
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 3 1999

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