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Interaction of p53 with prolyl isomerases: Healthy and unhealthy relationships
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Background The p53 protein family, comprising p53, p63 and p73, is primarily involved in preserving genome integrity and preventing tumor onset, and also affects a range of physiological processes. Signal-dependent modifications of its members and of other pathway components provide cells with a sophisticated code to transduce a variety of stress signaling into appropriate responses. TP53 mutations are highly frequent in cancer and lead to the expression of mutant p53 proteins that are endowed with oncogenic activities and sensitive to stress signaling. Scope of review p53 family proteins have unique structural and functional plasticity, and here we discuss the relevance of prolyl-isomerization to actively shape these features. Major conclusions The anti-proliferative functions of the p53 family are carefully activated upon severe stress and this involves the interaction with prolyl-isomerases. In particular, stress-induced stabilization of p53, activation of its transcriptional control over arrest- and cell death-related target genes and of its mitochondrial apoptotic function, as well as certain p63 and p73 functions, all require phosphorylation of specific S/T-P motifs and their subsequent isomerization by the prolyl-isomerase Pin1. While these functions of p53 counteract tumorigenesis, under some circumstances their activation by prolyl-isomerases may have negative repercussions (e.g. tissue damage induced by anticancer therapies and ischemia-reperfusion, neurodegeneration). Moreover, elevated Pin1 levels in tumor cells may transduce deregulated phosphorylation signaling into activation of mutant p53 oncogenic functions. General significance The complex repertoire of biological outcomes induced by p53 finds mechanistic explanations, at least in part, in the association between prolyl-isomerases and the p53 pathway. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Proline-directed foldases: Cell signaling catalysts and drug targets.
- Subjects :
- p53
Transcription Factor
Amino Acid Motifs
Apoptosis
medicine.disease_cause
Neurodegenerative disease
Biochemistry
Transcriptional regulation
Tumor Protein p73
Phosphorylation
Peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerases
Cancer
Nuclear Protein
Genetics
Protein Stability
Neurodegenerative diseases
Nuclear Proteins
Peptidylprolyl Isomerase
Cell biology
DNA-Binding Proteins
PIN1
Amino Acid Motif
Human
Cell signaling
Protein Structure
DNA-Binding Protein
Biophysics
Biology
Structure-Activity Relationship
Pin1
medicine
Animals
Humans
Transcription factor
Molecular Biology
Cell Proliferation
Peptidylprolyl isomerase
Tumor Suppressor Protein
Protein Structure, Tertiary
Transcription Factors
Tumor Suppressor Protein p53
Tumor Suppressor Proteins
Animal
Apoptosi
Peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerase
Biophysic
Carcinogenesis
Tertiary
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a60d1576bb7418e595c880043224066b