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Tumorigenic p53 mutants undergo common structural disruptions including conversion to α-sheet structure.

Dennis BromleyValerie Daggett
Published in: Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society (2020)
The p53 protein is a commonly studied cancer target because of its role in tumor suppression. Unfortunately, it is susceptible to mutation-associated loss of function; approximately 50% of cancers are associated with mutations to p53, the majority of which are located in the central DNA-binding domain. Here, we report molecular dynamics simulations of wild-type (WT) p53 and 20 different mutants, including a stabilized pseudo-WT mutant. Our findings indicate that p53 mutants tend to exacerbate latent structural-disruption tendencies, or vulnerabilities, already present in the WT protein, suggesting that it may be possible to develop cancer therapies by targeting a relatively small set of structural-disruption motifs rather than a multitude of effects specific to each mutant. In addition, α-sheet secondary structure formed in almost all of the proteins. α-Sheet has been hypothesized and recently demonstrated to play a role in amyloidogenesis, and its presence in the reported p53 simulations coincides with the recent re-consideration of cancer as an amyloid disease.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • papillary thyroid
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • dna binding
  • squamous cell
  • lymph node metastasis
  • transcription factor
  • amino acid
  • protein protein
  • molecular dynamics
  • small molecule