4.8 Article

A role for p53 in base excision repair

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 20, Issue 4, Pages 914-923

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1093/emboj/20.4.914

Keywords

AP endonuclease; base excision repair; DNA polymerase beta; p53

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R37 CA058316, CA58316, R01 CA058316] Funding Source: Medline

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Wild-type p53 protein can markedly stimulate base excision repair (BER) in vitro, either reconstituted with purified components or in extracts of cells. In contrast, p53 with missense mutations either at hotspots in the core domain or within the N-terminal transactivation domain is defective in this function. Stimulation of BER by p53 is correlated with its ability to interact directly both with the AP endonuclease (APE) and with DNA polymerase beta (pol beta), Furthermore, p53 stabilizes the interaction between DNA pol beta and abasic DNA. Evidence that this function of p53 is physiologically relevant is supported by the facts that BER activity in human and murine cell extracts closely parallels their levels of endogenous p53, and that BER activity is much reduced in cell extracts immunodepleted of p53. These data suggest a novel role for p53 in DNA repair, which could contribute to its function as a key tumor suppressor.

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