Deletion of the COOH-terminal region of p73alpha enhances both its transactivation function and DNA-binding activity but inhibits induction of apoptosis in mammalian cells.
Cancer Res
; 59(23): 5902-7, 1999 Dec 01.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-10606232
The candidate tumor suppressor p73 has a high sequence homology with p53 within the NH2-terminal transactivation domain, the sequence-specific DNA-binding region, and the oligomerization domain. However, p73alpha, which is most abundantly expressed in many tissues and cells among the alternatively spliced forms of p73, has an additional long COOH-terminal tail that might distinguish the function of p53 and p73alpha or other p73 splicing variants. To examine the functional role of the p73alpha COOH-terminal region, we generated a series of p73alpha truncation mutants including p73alpha(1-247) (retaining only a transactivation domain), p73alpha(1-427) (lacking the most COOH-terminal region including a SAM domain), and p73alpha(1-548) (deleting an extreme COOH-terminal region except a SAM domain). When transfected into COS cells, all of p73alpha, p73alpha(1-548), and p73alpha(1-427) localized in the cellular nucleus, whereas p73alpha(1-247) localized in both nucleus and cytoplasm. Intriguingly, when compared with p73alpha, both p73alpha(1-427) and p73alpha(1-548) showed a significant stimulation of the transcription of luciferase reporters harboring three p53-responsive promoters (p21(Waf1), Mdm2, and Bax) in p53-deficient SAOS-2 cells. Gel retardation assays showed that DNA-binding activity of p73alpha(1-427) and p73alpha(1-548) was increased as compared with that of the full-length p73alpha. However, the colony formation assays using SAOS-2 cells demonstrated that, contrary to p73alpha, transfection of p73alpha(1-427) or p73alpha(1-548) resulted in no significant reduction of the number of colonies. These suggest that the distal COOH-terminal region of p73alpha is a cis- or trans-acting regulatory domain and regulates its functions diversely.
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Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Nuclear Proteins
/
Sequence Deletion
/
Apoptosis
/
DNA-Binding Proteins
Limits:
Animals
/
Humans
Language:
En
Journal:
Cancer Res
Year:
1999
Type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Japan