Abstract

Mutations in the p53 tumor suppressor are the most frequently observed genetic alterations in human cancer. The majority of the mutations occur in the core domain which contains the sequence-specific DNA binding activity of the p53 protein (residues 102-292), and they result in loss of DNA binding. The crystal structure of a complex containing the core domain of human p53 and a DNA binding site has been determined at 2.2 angstroms resolution and refined to a crystallographic R factor of 20.5 percent. The core domain structure consists of a β sandwich that serves as a scaffold for two large loops and a loop-sheet-helix motif. The two loops, which are held together in part by a tetrahedrally coordinated zinc atom, and the loop-sheet-helix motif form the DNA binding surface of p53. Residues from the loop-sheet-helix motif interact in the major groove of the DNA, while an arginine from one of the two large loops interacts in the minor groove. The loops and the loop-sheet-helix motif consist of the conserved regions of the core domain and contain the majority of the p53 mutations identified in tumors. The structure supports the hypothesis that DNA binding is critical for the biological activity of p53, and provides a framework for understanding how mutations inactivate it.

Keywords

DNABiologyProtein structureBinding siteGeneticsBiochemistry

MeSH Terms

Amino Acid SequenceBase SequenceBinding SitesComputer GraphicsCrystallizationCrystallographyX-RayDNAGenesp53Hydrogen BondingModelsMolecularMolecular Sequence DataMutationNucleic Acid ConformationProtein ConformationProtein StructureSecondaryTumor Suppressor Protein p53

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Publication Info

Year
1994
Type
article
Volume
265
Issue
5170
Pages
346-355
Citations
2500
Access
Closed

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2500
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185
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Cite This

Yunje Cho, Svetlana S. Gorina, Philip D. Jeffrey et al. (1994). Crystal Structure of a p53 Tumor Suppressor-DNA Complex: Understanding Tumorigenic Mutations. Science , 265 (5170) , 346-355. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.8023157

Identifiers

DOI
10.1126/science.8023157
PMID
8023157

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%