Abstract
p53 not only functions as a transcription factor but also has a direct extranuclear apoptogenic role at the mitochondria. We have discovered that DNA damage-induced p53/Bcl2 binding is associated with decreased Bcl2/Bax interaction and increased apoptotic cell death in a mechanism regulated by Bcl2’s flexible loop regulatory domain (FLD) in IL3-dependent myeloid NSF/N1.H7 cells. Purified p53 protein can disrupt the Bcl2/Bax complex by directly binding to a negative regulatory region of the FLD (aa32–68). Deletion of the negative regulatory region (aa32–68) abolishes Bcl2/ p53 binding and enhances its antiapoptotic function. Removal of aa69–87 of the FLD, which contains Bcl2’s phosphorylation site(s) (T69, S70 and S87), enhances Bcl2/p53 binding and abrogates Bcl2’s potent survival activity, indicating this is a positive regulatory region. Phosphorylation of Bcl2 in the FLD inhibits p53 binding since the phosphomimetic T69E/S70E/S87E (EEE) but not the nonphosphorylatable T69A/S70A/S87A (AAA) Bcl2 mutant displays a reduced capacity to bind p53 and more potently inhibits p53-induced cytochrome c release. A full-length Bcl2 loop-only protein (aa32–87) can directly bind p53 to impede Bcl2/p53 binding in vitro. Either DNA damage or expression of p53 targeted to mitochondria results in Bcl2/p53 binding followed by exposure of Bcl2’s BH3 domain and inactivation of Bcl2’s antiapoptotic function. Therefore, Bcl2’s FLD contains both a positive and negative regulatory regions which functionally regulate Bcl2’s antiapoptotic activity via differential binding of Bax and p53, respectively.
Author notes
Corresponding author
This feature is available to Subscribers Only
Sign In or Create an Account Close Modal