Divalent metal ions induce conformational change in pure, human wild-type p53 tumor suppressor protein

1994 
Abstract The ability of wild-type and not mutant p53 to exert antiproliferative effects on normal cells may be related to a difference in the conformational state of the protein. We have used pure, human wild-type p53 and a panel of monoclonal antibodies whose epitopes map throughout the protein to assess whether divalent metal ions affect the conformation of p53. Our results show that the presence of Zn 2+ ions at physiological concentrations, directly reduced or blocked accessibility of epitopes on pure wild-type p53, an effect which was reversed by chelating agents. Loss of epitope reactivity was maximal between the protein mid-region and C-terminus. Analytical sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation studies also confirmed that Zn 2+ -induced conformational changes partially affected the pattern of p53 oligomerisation. The observed binding of pure p53 to a sequence-specific DNA motif was unaffected by the presence of added Zn 2+ ions or metal chelating agents.
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