1. Academic Validation
  2. A C-terminal inhibitory domain controls the activity of p63 by an intramolecular mechanism

A C-terminal inhibitory domain controls the activity of p63 by an intramolecular mechanism

  • Mol Cell Biol. 2002 Dec;22(24):8601-11. doi: 10.1128/MCB.22.24.8601-8611.2002.
Zach Serber 1 Helen C Lai Annie Yang Horng D Ou Martina S Sigal Alexander E Kelly Beatrice D Darimont Pascal H G Duijf Hans Van Bokhoven Frank McKeon Volker Dötsch
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Graduate Group in Biophysics, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California 94143, USA.
Abstract

The human genome is far smaller than originally estimated, and one explanation is that alternative splicing creates greater proteomic complexity than a simple count of open reading frames would suggest. The p53 homologue p63, for example, is a tetrameric transcription factor implicated in epithelial development and expressed as at least six isoforms with widely differing transactivation potential. In particular, p63alpha isoforms contain a 27-kDa C-terminal region that drastically reduces their activity and is of clear biological importance, since patients with deletions in this C terminus have phenotypes very similar to patients with mutations in the DNA-binding domain. We have identified a novel domain within this C terminus that is necessary and sufficient for transcriptional inhibition and which acts by binding to a region in the N-terminal transactivation domain of p63 homologous to the MDM2 binding site in p53. Based on this mechanism, we provide a model that explains the transactivation potential of homo- and heterotetramers composed of different p63 isoforms and their effect on p53.

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