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Modulation of p53 Transactivation Domain Conformations by Ligand Binding and Cancer-Associated Mutations

Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are important functional proteins, and their deregulation are linked to numerous human diseases including cancers. Understanding how disease-associated mutations or drug molecules can perturb the sequence-disordered ensemble-function-disease relationship of I...

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Autores principales: Liu, Xiaorong, Chen, Jianhan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6934143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31797597
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author Liu, Xiaorong
Chen, Jianhan
author_facet Liu, Xiaorong
Chen, Jianhan
author_sort Liu, Xiaorong
collection PubMed
description Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are important functional proteins, and their deregulation are linked to numerous human diseases including cancers. Understanding how disease-associated mutations or drug molecules can perturb the sequence-disordered ensemble-function-disease relationship of IDPs remains challenging, because it requires detailed characterization of the heterogeneous structural ensembles of IDPs. In this work, we combine the latest atomistic force field a99SB-disp, enhanced sampling technique replica exchange with solute tempering, and GPU-accelerated molecular dynamics simulations to investigate how four cancer-associated mutations, K24N, N29K/N30D, D49Y, and W53G, and binding of an anti-cancer molecule, epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), modulate the disordered ensemble of the transactivation domain (TAD) of tumor suppressor p53. Through extensive sampling, in excess of 1.0 μs per replica, well-converged structural ensembles of wild-type and mutant p53-TAD as well as WT p53-TAD in the presence of EGCG were generated. The results reveal that mutants could induce local structural changes and affect secondary structural properties. Interestingly, both EGCG binding and N29K/N30D could also induce long-range structural reorganizations and lead to more compact structures that could shield key binding sites of p53-TAD regulators. Further analysis reveals that the effects of EGCG binding are mainly achieved through nonspecific interactions. These observations are generally consistent with on-going NMR studies and binding assays. Our studies suggest that induced conformational collapse of IDPs may be a general mechanism for shielding functional sites, thus inhibiting recognition of their targets. The current study also demonstrates that atomistic simulations provide a viable approach for studying the sequence-disordered ensemble-function-disease relationships of IDPs and developing new drug design strategies targeting regulatory IDPs.
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spelling pubmed-69341432020-01-01 Modulation of p53 Transactivation Domain Conformations by Ligand Binding and Cancer-Associated Mutations Liu, Xiaorong Chen, Jianhan Pac Symp Biocomput Article Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) are important functional proteins, and their deregulation are linked to numerous human diseases including cancers. Understanding how disease-associated mutations or drug molecules can perturb the sequence-disordered ensemble-function-disease relationship of IDPs remains challenging, because it requires detailed characterization of the heterogeneous structural ensembles of IDPs. In this work, we combine the latest atomistic force field a99SB-disp, enhanced sampling technique replica exchange with solute tempering, and GPU-accelerated molecular dynamics simulations to investigate how four cancer-associated mutations, K24N, N29K/N30D, D49Y, and W53G, and binding of an anti-cancer molecule, epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), modulate the disordered ensemble of the transactivation domain (TAD) of tumor suppressor p53. Through extensive sampling, in excess of 1.0 μs per replica, well-converged structural ensembles of wild-type and mutant p53-TAD as well as WT p53-TAD in the presence of EGCG were generated. The results reveal that mutants could induce local structural changes and affect secondary structural properties. Interestingly, both EGCG binding and N29K/N30D could also induce long-range structural reorganizations and lead to more compact structures that could shield key binding sites of p53-TAD regulators. Further analysis reveals that the effects of EGCG binding are mainly achieved through nonspecific interactions. These observations are generally consistent with on-going NMR studies and binding assays. Our studies suggest that induced conformational collapse of IDPs may be a general mechanism for shielding functional sites, thus inhibiting recognition of their targets. The current study also demonstrates that atomistic simulations provide a viable approach for studying the sequence-disordered ensemble-function-disease relationships of IDPs and developing new drug design strategies targeting regulatory IDPs. 2020 /pmc/articles/PMC6934143/ /pubmed/31797597 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ Open Access chapter published by World Scientific Publishing Company and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial (CC BY-NC) 4.0 License.
spellingShingle Article
Liu, Xiaorong
Chen, Jianhan
Modulation of p53 Transactivation Domain Conformations by Ligand Binding and Cancer-Associated Mutations
title Modulation of p53 Transactivation Domain Conformations by Ligand Binding and Cancer-Associated Mutations
title_full Modulation of p53 Transactivation Domain Conformations by Ligand Binding and Cancer-Associated Mutations
title_fullStr Modulation of p53 Transactivation Domain Conformations by Ligand Binding and Cancer-Associated Mutations
title_full_unstemmed Modulation of p53 Transactivation Domain Conformations by Ligand Binding and Cancer-Associated Mutations
title_short Modulation of p53 Transactivation Domain Conformations by Ligand Binding and Cancer-Associated Mutations
title_sort modulation of p53 transactivation domain conformations by ligand binding and cancer-associated mutations
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6934143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31797597
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