Recognition of RNA by the p53 tumor suppressor protein in the yeast three-hybrid system

  1. KASANDRA J.-L. RILEY1,
  2. LAURA A. CASSIDAY1,2,
  3. AKASH KUMAR1,3, and
  4. L. JAMES MAHER III1
  1. 1Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, USA

Abstract

The p53 tumor suppressor protein is a homotetrameric transcription factor whose gene is mutated in nearly half of all human cancers. In an unrelated screen of RNA/protein interactions using the yeast three-hybrid system, we inadvertently detected p53 interactions with several different RNAs. A literature review revealed previous reports of both sequence-specific and -non-specific interactions between p53 and RNA. Using yeast three-hybrid selections to identify preferred RNA partners for p53, we failed to identify primary RNA sequences or obvious secondary structures required for p53 binding. The cationic p53 C-terminus was shown to be required for RNA binding in yeast. We show that while p53 strongly discriminates between certain RNAs in the yeast three-hybrid assay, the same RNAs are bound equally by p53 in vitro. We further show that the p53 RNA-binding preferences in yeast are mirrored almost exactly by a recombinant tetrameric form of the HIV-1 nucleocapsid (NC) protein thought to be a sequence-nonspecific RNA-binding protein. However, the possibility of specific RNA binding by p53 could not be ruled out because p53 and HIV-1 NC displayed certain differences in RNA-binding preference. We conclude that (1) p53 binds RNA in vivo, (2) RNA binding by p53 is largely sequence-nonspecific in the yeast nucleus, (3) some structure-specific RNA binding by p53 cannot be ruled out, and (4) caution is required when interpreting results of RNA screens in the yeast three-hybrid system because sequence-dependent differences in RNA folding and display can masquerade as sequence-dependent differences in protein recognition.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • 2 Present addresses: Cassiday Consulting, 16420 Timber Cove St., Hudson, CO 80642, USA;

  • 3 Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA.

  • Article and publication are at http://www.rnajournal.org/cgi/doi/10.1261/rna.2286706.

    • Accepted December 22, 2005.
    • Received November 9, 2005.
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