Publications by authors named "Alexander Dehner"

p63 is a close homologue of p53 and, together with p73, is grouped into the p53 family of transcription factors. p63 is known to be involved in the induction of controlled apoptosis important for differentiation processes, germ line integrity and development. Despite its high homology to p53, especially within the DNA binding domain (DBD), p63-DBD does not show cooperative DNA binding properties and is significantly more stable against thermal and chemical denaturation.

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Every single day, the DNA of each cell in the human body is mutated thousands of times, even in absence of oncogenes or extreme radiation. Many of these mutations could lead to cancer and, finally, death. To fight this, multicellular organisms have evolved an efficient control system with the tumor-suppressor protein p53 as the central element.

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The induction of apoptosis by p53 in response to cellular stress is its most conserved function and crucial for p53 tumor suppression. We recently reported that p53 directly induces oligomerization of the BH1,2,3 effector protein Bak, leading to outer mitochondrial membrane permeabilization (OMMP) with release of apoptotic activator proteins. One important mechanism by which p53 achieves OMMP is by forming an inhibitory complex with the anti-apoptotic BclXL protein.

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Protein interactions and aggregation phenomena are probably amongst the most ubiquitous types of interactions in biological systems; they play a key role in many cellular processes. The ability to identify weak intermolecular interactions is a unique feature of NMR spectroscopy. In recent years, pulsed-field gradient NMR spectroscopy has become a convenient method to study molecular diffusion in solution.

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The transcription factor p53 acts as major tumor suppressor and is inactivated by mutation in more than 50% of all human tumors. We have established an efficient procedure for the in vitro folding and purification of the p53 DNA binding domain (p53DBD) using a modified factorial matrix approach that supplies large amounts of homogeneous (isotope-labeled) p53DBD for application in biochemical, crystallographic and NMR spectroscopic studies. We further show with biophysical methods that in vitro folded p53DBD is fully functional and that its conformation is identical to that obtained from the soluble fraction.

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p53 is one of the key molecules regulating cell proliferation, apoptosis and tumor suppression by integrating a wide variety of signals. The structural basis for this function is still poorly understood. p53 appears to exercise its function as a modular protein in which different functions are associated with distinct domains.

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Hsp90 is one of the most abundant chaperone proteins in the cytosol. In an ATP-dependent manner it plays an essential role in the folding and activation of a range of client proteins involved in signal transduction and cell cycle regulation. We used NMR shift perturbation experiments to obtain information on the structural implications of the binding of AMP-PNP (adenylyl-imidodiphosphate-a non-hydrolysable ATP analogue), ADP and the inhibitors radicicol and geldanamycin.

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