4.6 Article

Ensemble-Based Computational Approach Discriminates Functional Activity of p53 Cancer and Rescue Mutants

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PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
卷 7, 期 10, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002238

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资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [1-DP2-OD007237]
  2. NSF [LRAC CHE060073N]
  3. NIH Natl. Cancer Institute BISTI [CA-112560]

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The tumor suppressor protein p53 can lose its function upon single-point missense mutations in the core DNA-binding domain (cancer mutants''). Activity can be restored by second-site suppressor mutations (rescue mutants''). This paper relates the functional activity of p53 cancer and rescue mutants to their overall molecular dynamics (MD), without focusing on local structural details. A novel global measure of protein flexibility for the p53 core DNA-binding domain, the number of clusters at a certain RMSD cutoff, was computed by clustering over 0.7 mu s of explicitly solvated all-atom MD simulations. For wild-type p53 and a sample of p53 cancer or rescue mutants, the number of clusters was a good predictor of in vivo p53 functional activity in cell-based assays. This number-of-clusters (NOC) metric was strongly correlated (r(2) = 0.77) with reported values of experimentally measured Delta Delta G protein thermodynamic stability. Interpreting the number of clusters as a measure of protein flexibility: (i) p53 cancer mutants were more flexible than wild-type protein, (ii) second-site rescue mutations decreased the flexibility of cancer mutants, and (iii) negative controls of non-rescue second-site mutants did not. This new method reflects the overall stability of the p53 core domain and can discriminate which second-site mutations restore activity to p53 cancer mutants.

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