Redox state of p63 and p73 core domains regulates sequence-specific DNA binding.

Biochem Biophys Res Commun

Institute of Biophysics, Academy of Science of The Czech Republic, v.v.i., Královopolská 135, 612 65 Brno, Czech Republic.

Published: April 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cysteine oxidation impacts redox-sensitive transcription factors like p53, p63, and p73, crucial for cellular responses to oxidative stress.
  • Oxidation disrupts p53's ability to bind to DNA by affecting zinc coordination, while p63 and p73, despite binding similar DNA elements, have distinct functions and show differing resistance to oxidative damage.
  • Research demonstrated that p63 and p73 are also sensitive to oxidation, but they can partially maintain their DNA binding activity in the presence of specific DNA, highlighting their potential roles in the oxidative stress response.

Article Abstract

Cysteine oxidation and covalent modification of redox sensitive transcription factors including p53 are known, among others, as important events in cell response to oxidative stress. All p53 family proteins p53, p63 and p73 act as stress-responsive transcription factors. Oxidation of p53 central DNA binding domain destroys its structure and abolishes its sequence-specific binding by affecting zinc ion coordination at the protein-DNA interface. Proteins p63 and p73 can bind the same response elements as p53 but exhibit distinct functions. Moreover, all three proteins contain highly conserved cysteines in central DNA binding domain suitable for possible redox modulation. In this work we report for the first time the redox sensitivity of p63 and p73 core domains to a thiol oxidizing agent azodicarboxylic acid bis[dimethylamide] (diamide). Oxidation of both p63 and p73 abolished sequence-specific binding to p53 consensus sequence, depending on the agent concentration. In the presence of specific DNA all p53 family core domains were partially protected against loss of DNA binding activity due to diamide treatment. Furthermore, we detected conditional reversibility of core domain oxidation for all p53 family members and a role of zinc ions in this process. We showed that p63 and p73 proteins had greater ability to resist the diamide oxidation in comparison with p53. Our results show p63 and p73 as redox sensitive proteins with possible functionality in response of p53 family proteins to oxidative stress.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrc.2013.02.097DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

p63 p73
28
dna binding
16
p53 family
16
core domains
12
p53
10
p73 core
8
redox sensitive
8
transcription factors
8
oxidative stress
8
family proteins
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!