pubmed:abstractText |
Transcriptional activation domains share little sequence homology and generally lack folded structures in the absence of their targets, aspects that have rendered activation domains difficult to characterize. Here, a combination of biochemical and nuclear magnetic resonance experiments demonstrates that the activation domain of the tumor suppressor p53 has an FXXPhiPhi motif (F, Phe; X, any amino acids; Phi, hydrophobic residues) that folds into an alpha-helix upon binding to one of its targets, hTAF(II)31 (a human TFIID TATA box-binding protein-associated factor). MDM2, the cellular attenuator of p53, discriminates the FXXPhiPhi motif of p53 from those of NF-kappaB p65 and VP16 and specifically inhibits p53 activity. Our studies support the notion that the FXXPhiPhi sequence is a general alpha-helical recognition motif for hTAF(II)31 and provide insights into the mechanistic basis for regulation of p53 function.
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