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Novel simplified yeast‐based assays of regulators of p53– MDMX interaction and p53 transcriptional activity
Author(s) -
Leão Mariana,
Gomes Sara,
Soares Joana,
Bessa Cláudia,
Maciel Cláudia,
Ciribilli Yari,
Pereira Clara,
Inga Alberto,
Saraiva Lucília
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the febs journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 204
eISSN - 1742-4658
pISSN - 1742-464X
DOI - 10.1111/febs.12552
Subject(s) - mdmx , transactivation , mutant , yeast , mdm2 , biology , reporter gene , microbiology and biotechnology , ubiquitin ligase , saccharomyces cerevisiae , transcription factor , transcription (linguistics) , gene , ubiquitin , biochemistry , gene expression , philosophy , linguistics
Yeast has proven to be an efficient model system for functional and pharmacological studies of the p53 tumour suppressor protein. In this work, the human p53–MDMX regulatory pathway was reconstituted in yeast. Additionally, by using the known inhibitor of p53–MDMX interaction, SJ‐172550, the efficacy of a simplified yeast‐based screening assay to search for inhibitors of p53–MDMX interaction is demonstrated for the first time. Moreover, further insights on p53 transcriptional activity in yeast are provided. In particular, it is shown that the reported wild‐type (wt) p53‐induced yeast growth inhibition and cell cycle arrest is associated with actin depolarization and with an increase of actin mRNA and protein expression levels. The increase of actin protein levels was not observed with the p53 R273H mutant (a loss of function p53 mutation hotspot) and was further intensified with the toxic p53 V122A mutant (reported to exhibit higher transcriptional activity than wt p53 for selected p53 target sequences). Moreover, it is shown that the wt p53‐induced actin protein levels are modulated by natural (MDM2 and MDMX) and chemical (pifithrin‐α, nutlin‐3a and SJ‐172550) regulators of p53 activity. Furthermore, wt p53 could stimulate transcription from a minimal promoter containing a fragment of the ACT1 upstream sequence. Thus, ACT1 is proposed as a putative endogenous p53 target gene. This finding may open the way for the development of simpler yeast p53 transactivation assays, not based on artificial reporter constructs, for the analysis of the impact of mutants, cofactors and small molecules on p53 transcriptional activity.

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