Cancer susceptibility polymorphism of p53 at codon 72 affects phosphorylation and degradation of p53 protein

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Abstract

The common polymorphism of p53 at codon 72, either encoding proline or arginine, has drawn attention as a genetic factor associated with clinical outcome or cancer risk for the last 2 decades. We now show that these two polymorphic variants differ in protein structure, especially within the N-terminal region and, as a consequence, differ in post-translational modification at the N terminus. The arginine form (p53-72R) shows significantly enhanced phosphorylation at Ser-6 and Ser-20 compared with the proline form (p53-72P). We also show diminished Mdm2-mediated degradation of p53-72R compared with p53-72P, which is at least partly brought about by higher levels of phosphorylation at Ser-20 in p53-72R. Furthermore, enhanced p21 expression in p53-72R-expressing cells, which is dependent on phosphorylation at Ser-6, was demonstrated. Differential p21 expression between the variants was also observed upon activation of TGF-β signaling. Collectively, we demonstrate a novel molecular difference and simultaneously suggest a difference in the tumor-suppressing function of the variants. © 2011 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Ozeki, C., Sawai, Y., Shibata, T., Kohno, T., Okamoto, K., Yokota, J., … Ohki, R. (2011). Cancer susceptibility polymorphism of p53 at codon 72 affects phosphorylation and degradation of p53 protein. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 286(20), 18251–18260. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M110.208587

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