Targeting protein inactivation through an oligomerization chain reaction

  1. Francesco Contegno,
  2. Mario Cioce,
  3. Pier Giuseppe Pelicci, and
  4. Saverio Minucci*
  1. Department of Experimental Oncology, European Institute of Oncology, Via Ripamonti 435, 20141 Milan, Italy
  1. Edited by Igor B. Dawid, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, and approved December 28, 2001 (received for review August 30, 2001)

Abstract

A general strategy for inactivation of target proteins is presented, which we have termed “oligomerization chain reaction.” This technique is based on the fusion of the self-associating coiled-coil (CC) domain of the nuclear factor promyelocytic leukemia (PML) to target proteins that are able to self-associate naturally. Oligomerization through the CC region of promyelocytic leukemia, and through the natural self-associating domain, triggers the oligomerization chain reaction, leading to formation of large molecular weight complexes and functional inactivation of the target. As a test case, we have chosen the oncosuppressor p53, naturally occurring as a tetramer. Fusion of the CC to p53 leads to formation of stable high molecular weight complexes—as shown by size exclusion chromatography—to which wild-type p53 is recruited with high efficiency. CC-p53 chimeras delocalize wild-type p53 to the cytoplasm and inhibit its transcriptional regulatory properties, resulting in a loss of p53 function. We propose that this strategy may be of general application to self-associating factors and represent a complementary approach to currently used functional inactivation-based strategies.

Footnotes

  • * To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: sminucci{at}ieo.it.

  • This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the PNAS office.

  • Abbreviations:
    OCR,
    oligomerization chain reaction;
    CC,
    coiled coil;
    SEC,
    size exclusion chromatography;
    wt,
    wild type;
    MEF,
    murine embryonic fibroblast;
    RAR,
    retinoic acid receptor
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