Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The E6 protein of the high-risk human papillomaviruses inactivates the
tumor suppressor protein p53
by stimulating its ubiquitinylation and subsequent degradation. Ubiquitinylation is a multistep process involving a ubiquitin-activating enzyme, one of many distinct ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes, and in certain cases, a
ubiquitin ligase
. In human papillomavirus-infected cells, E6 and the E6-associated protein are thought to act as a ubiquitin-protein ligase in the ubiquitinylation of
p53
. Here we describe the cloning of a human ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme that specifically ubiquitinylates E6-associated protein. Furthermore, we define the biochemical pathway of
p53
ubiquitinylation and demonstrate that in vivo inhibition of various components in the pathway leads to an inhibition of E6-stimulated
p53
degradation.
...
PMID:Reconstitution of p53-ubiquitinylation reactions from purified components: the role of human ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme UBC4 and E6-associated protein (E6AP). 772 50
While the bovine papillomavirus type 1 (BPV-1) E6 induces tumorigenic transformation of murine C127 cells, it does not bind or promote the degradation of
p53
. We recently showed the cellular protein ERC-55/E6BP binds BPV-1 E6 as well as the cancer-related human papillomavirus (HPV) E6 proteins. BPV-1 E6 also binds E6-AP, a
ubiquitin ligase
necessary for HPV E6-induced
p53
degradation. We previously reported that the transforming activity of a set of BPV-1 E6 mutants correlated with their E6BP-binding ability. Another function of BPV-1 E6 is stimulation of transcription when targeted to a promoter, although cellular promoters responsive to BPV-1 E6 have not been identified. To examine whether its transcriptional function is required for oncogenic activity, or is related to its interactions with E6-AP or E6BP, a series of BPV-1 E6 mutants were analyzed as fusions to a sequence-specific DNA binding domain for activity in yeast and in mammalian cells. We show that some transformation defective mutants retained substantial levels of transcriptional activation activity. These mutants also distinguish transcriptional activation from E6-AP and E6BP binding. These results suggest the transcriptional activation function of BPV-1 E6 is not sufficient for cell transformation.
...
PMID:Mutational analysis of transcriptional activation by the bovine papillomavirus type 1 E6. 929 14
The
tumor suppressor p53
is degraded by the ubiquitin-proteasome system.
p53
was polyubiquitinated in the presence of E1, UbcH5 as E2 and MDM2 oncoprotein. A ubiquitin molecule bound MDM2 through sulfhydroxy bond which is characteristic of
ubiquitin ligase
(E3)-ubiquitin binding. The cysteine residue in the carboxyl terminus of MDM2 was essential for the activity. These data suggest that the MDM2 protein, which is induced by
p53
, functions as a
ubiquitin ligase
, E3, in human papillomavirus-uninfected cells which do not have E6 protein.
...
PMID:Oncoprotein MDM2 is a ubiquitin ligase E3 for tumor suppressor p53. 945 May 43
We have found that the E6 oncoprotein of Bovine Papillomavirus Type 1 (BE6) as well as the E6 protein of the cancer associated HPV-16 (16E6) interact with the focal adhesion protein paxillin. Mutational analysis of paxillin revealed that BE6 binds paxillin through small protein interaction motifs called LD motifs that have been previously identified as important in regulating association of paxillin with vinculin and focal adhesion kinase (FAK), and that BE6 can interact with at least two separate binding sites on paxillin. The LD motifs of paxillin that bind BE6 share homology with the E6 binding site of E6-AP, a
ubiquitin ligase
that together with 16E6 targets the degradation of the
p53 tumor suppressor
. Paxillin binding to BE6 excludes simultaneous binding to E6-AP. Mutational analysis of BE6 can distinguish the interaction of BE6 with E6-AP compared to paxillin and revealed that the interaction of BE6 with paxillin may be necessary for the induction of anchorage independent growth of cells by BE6.
...
PMID:Association of Bovine Papillomavirus Type 1 E6 oncoprotein with the focal adhesion protein paxillin through a conserved protein interaction motif. 946 41
The E6-AP
ubiquitin ligase
(human/mouse gene UBE3A/Ube3a) promotes the degradation of
p53
in association with papilloma E6 protein, and maternal deficiency causes human Angelman syndrome (AS). Ube3a is imprinted with silencing of the paternal allele in hippocampus and cerebellum in mice. We found that the phenotype of mice with maternal deficiency (m-/p+) for Ube3a resembles human AS with motor dysfunction, inducible seizures, and a context-dependent learning deficit. Long-term potentiation (LTP) was severely impaired in m-/p+ mice despite normal baseline synaptic transmission and neuroanatomy, indicating that ubiquitination may play a role in mammalian LTP and that LTP may be abnormal in AS. The cytoplasmic abundance of
p53
was increased in postmitotic neurons in m-/p+ mice and in AS, providing a potential biochemical basis for the phenotype through failure to ubiquitinate and degrade various effectors.
...
PMID:Mutation of the Angelman ubiquitin ligase in mice causes increased cytoplasmic p53 and deficits of contextual learning and long-term potentiation. 980 47
We have demonstrated previously that the oncoprotein Mdm2 has a
ubiquitin ligase
activity for the
tumor suppressor p53
protein. In the present study, we characterize this
ubiquitin ligase
activity of Mdm2. We first demonstrate the ubiquitination of several
p53
point mutants and deletion mutants by Mdm2. The point mutants, which cannot bind to Mdm2, are not ubiquitinated by Mdm2. The ubiquitination of the C-terminal deletion mutants, which contain so-called Mdm2-binding sites, is markedly decreased, compared with that of wild-type
p53
. The binding of Mdm2 to
p53
is essential for ubiquitination, but
p53
's tertiary structure and/or C-terminal region may also be important for this reaction. DNA-dependent protein kinase is known to phosphorylate
p53
on Mdm2-binding sites, where DNA damage induces phosphorylation, and
p53
phosphorylated by this kinase is not a good substrate for Mdm2. This suggests that DNA damage-induced phosphorylation stabilizes
p53
by inhibiting its ubiquitination by Mdm2. We further investigated whether the tumor suppressor p19(ARF) affects the
ubiquitin ligase
activity of Mdm2 for
p53
. The activity of p19(ARF)-bound Mdm2 was found to be lower than that of free Mdm2, suggesting that p19(ARF) promotes the stabilization of
p53
by inactivating Mdm2.
...
PMID:Association of p19(ARF) with Mdm2 inhibits ubiquitin ligase activity of Mdm2 for tumor suppressor p53. 987 46
Human papillomavirus (HPV) E6 proteins inhibit apoptosis in both
p53
-dependent and
p53
-independent manners. A key point in apoptosis is the regulation provided by the Bcl-2 family; and in differentiating keratinocytes, in which HPV replicates, the Bak protein is highly expressed. We show that HPV-18 E6 will inhibit Bak-induced apoptosis and this is mediated by an interaction between the E6 and Bak proteins resulting in degradation of the Bak protein in vivo. We also show that Bak protein interacts with the
ubiquitin ligase
, E6AP, and that a mutant of Bak defective in E6AP binding is overexpressed in comparison with wild type. These studies suggest that Bak is probably the first naturally occurring target of E6AP to be identified.
...
PMID:Inhibition of Bak-induced apoptosis by HPV-18 E6. 988 96
Ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis has a central role in controlling the intracellular levels of several important regulatory molecules such as cyclins, CKIs,
p53
, and IkappaBalpha. Many diverse proinflammatory signals lead to the specific phosphorylation and subsequent ubiquitin-mediated destruction of the NF-kappaB inhibitor protein IkappaBalpha. Substrate specificity in ubiquitination reactions is, in large part, mediated by the specific association of the E3-ubiquitin ligases with their substrates. One class of E3 ligases is defined by the recently described SCF complexes, the archetype of which was first described in budding yeast and contains Skp1, Cdc53, and the F-box protein Cdc4. These complexes recognize their substrates through modular F-box proteins in a phosphorylation-dependent manner. Here we describe a biochemical dissection of a novel mammalian SCF complex, SCFbeta-TRCP, that specifically recognizes a 19-amino-acid destruction motif in IkappaBalpha (residues 21-41) in a phosphorylation-dependent manner. This SCF complex also recognizes a conserved destruction motif in beta-catenin, a protein with levels also regulated by phosphorylation-dependent ubiquitination. Endogenous IkappaBalpha-
ubiquitin ligase
activity cofractionates with SCFbeta-TRCP. Furthermore, recombinant SCFbeta-TRCP assembled in mammalian cells contains phospho-IkappaBalpha-specific
ubiquitin ligase
activity. Our results suggest that an SCFbeta-TRCP complex functions in multiple transcriptional programs by activating the NF-kappaB pathway and inhibiting the beta-catenin pathway.
...
PMID:The SCFbeta-TRCP-ubiquitin ligase complex associates specifically with phosphorylated destruction motifs in IkappaBalpha and beta-catenin and stimulates IkappaBalpha ubiquitination in vitro. 999 Aug 52
The
p53
tumour suppressor protein is regulated by ubiquitin-mediated proteasomal degradation. In normal cells
p53
is constitutively ubiquitylated by the Mdm2
ubiquitin ligase
. When the
p53
response is activated by stress signals
p53
levels rise due to inhibition of this degradative pathway. Here we show that
p53
is modified by the small ubiquitin-like protein SUMO-1 at a single site, K386, in the C-terminus of the protein. Modification in vitro requires only SUMO-1, the SUMO-1 activating enzyme and ubc9. SUMO-1 and ubiquitin modification do not compete for the same lysine acceptor sites in
p53
. Overexpression of SUMO-1 activates the transcriptional activity of wild-type
p53
, but not K386R
p53
where the SUMO-1 acceptor site has been mutated. The SUMO-1 modification pathway therefore acts as a potential regulator of the
p53
response and may represent a novel target for the development of therapeutically useful modulators of the
p53
response.
...
PMID:SUMO-1 modification activates the transcriptional response of p53. 1056 57
We demonstrated previously that loss of in vitro transformation and in vivo tumorigenicity in two independent revertant clones of HeLa cells (designated HA and HF) resulted from dominant-acting genetic changes. Analysis of the
p53 tumor suppressor
gene revealed stabilization and at least partial restoration of wild-type
p53
transactivation properties pathways in both revertants of HPV-induced cell transformation. The half-lives of the
p53 protein
and both of the HA and HF clones were increased approximately 4 fold compared with the parental HeLa cells (16, 17, and 4 min, respectively). The levels of E6 viral protein expression were similar in the three cell lines, whereas the levels of the
ubiquitin ligase
protein, E6 associated protein (E6-AP), were elevated in the revertants. Western blot analysis of immunoaffinity-purified
p53
demonstrated that stabilization of
p53
in the revertants was correlated with a reduction in the in vivo formation of complexes involving the E6 oncoprotein and
p53
. Stabilization of
p53
function in the revertants did not result from mutations in either the
p53
or E6-AP genes. Despite the observed stabilization and restoration of
p53
transactivation function in the revertants, exposure of the revertants to DNA-damaging agents did not result in elevated levels of p21(waf-1) protein and failed to induce growth arrest in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. However,
p53
-independent induction of p21(waf-1) protein also failed to induce the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Thus, restoration of wild-type
p53
transactivation activity in the HA and HF revertants is insufficient to induce G1 arrest and reversion from HPV-induced cell transformation in our model system.
...
PMID:Stabilization and reactivation of the p53 tumor suppressor protein in nontumorigenic revertants of HeLa cervical cancer cells. 1059 49
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>