PMC Biophysics
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Research articleStructural and functional implications of p53 missense cancer mutationsYuhong Tan and Ray Luo  Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697-3900, USA
author email corresponding author email
PMC Biophysics 2009,
2:5doi:10.1186/1757-5036-2-5
Abstract
Most human cancers contain mutations in the transcription factor p53 and majority of these are missense and located in the
DNA binding core domain. In this study, the stabilities of all core domain missense mutations are predicted and are used to
infer their likely inactivation mechanisms. Overall, 47.0% non-PRO/GLY mutants are stable (ΔΔG < 1.0 kT) and 36.3% mutants
are unstable (ΔΔG > 3.0 kT), 12.2% mutants are with 1.0 kT < ΔΔG < 3.0 kT. Only 4.5% mutants are with no conclusive predictions.
Certain types of either stable or unstable mutations are found not to depend on their local structures. Y, I, C, V, F and
W (W, R and F) are the most common residues before (after) mutation in unstable mutants. Q, N, K, D, A, S and T (I, T, L and
V) are the most common residues before (after) mutation in stable mutants. The stability correlations with sequence, structure,
and molecular contacts are also analyzed. No direct correlation between secondary structure and stability is apparent, but
a strong correlation between solvent exposure and stability is noticeable. Our correlation analysis shows that loss of protein-protein
contacts may be an alternative cause for p53 inactivation. Correlation with clinical data shows that loss of stability and
loss of DNA contacts are the two main inactivation mechanisms. Finally, correlation with functional data shows that most mutations
which retain functions are stable, and most mutations that gain functions are unstable, indicating destabilized and deformed
p53 proteins are more likely to find new binding partners.
PACS codes: 87.14.E-
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