Cryptic in vitro ubiquitin ligase activity of HDMX towards p53 is probably regulated by an induced fit mechanism
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HDMX and its homologue HDM2 are two essential proteins for the cell; after genotoxic stress, both are phosphorylated near to their RING domain, specifically at serine 403 and 395, respectively. Once phosphorylated, both can bind the p53 mRNA and enhance its translation; however, both recognize p53 protein and provoke its degradation under normal conditions. HDM2 has been well-recognized as an E3 ubiquitin ligase, whereas it has been reported that even with the high similarity between the RING domains of the two homologs, HDMX does not have the E3 ligase activity. Despite this, HDMX is needed for the proper p53 poly-ubiquitination. Phosphorylation at serine 395 changes the conformation of HDM2, helping to explain the switch in its activity, but no information on HDMX has been published. Here, we study the conformation of HDMX and its phospho-mimetic mutant S403D, investigate its E3 ligase activity and dissect its binding with p53. We show that phospho-mutation does not change the conformation of the protein, but HDMX is indeed an E3 ubiquitin ligase in vitro; however, in vivo, no activity was found. We speculated that HDMX is regulated by induced fit, being able to switch activity accordingly to the specific partner as p53 protein, p53 mRNA or HDM2. Our results aim to contribute to the elucidation of the contribution of the HDMX to p53 regulation. © 2022 The Author(s).
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messenger RNA; mouse double minute 2 homolog; protein HDMX; protein p53; protein S403D; RING finger protein; ubiquitin protein ligase E3; unclassified drug; cell cycle protein; messenger RNA; mouse double minute 2 homolog; nuclear protein; oncoprotein; protein binding; protein p53; serine; ubiquitin; ubiquitin protein ligase; Article; controlled study; enzyme activity; gene expression; gene mutation; human; human cell; in vitro study; NCI-H1299 cell line; protein analysis; protein binding; protein conformation; protein phosphorylation; protein protein interaction; regulatory mechanism; genetics; metabolism; ubiquitination; Cell Cycle Proteins; Nuclear Proteins; Protein Binding; Proto-Oncogene Proteins; Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-mdm2; RNA, Messenger; Serine; Tumor Suppressor Protein p53; Ubiquitin; Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases; Ubiquitination
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