| Description | Human p53 protein is composed of 393 amino acid residues with several distinct regions. The N-terminal activation domain allows p53 protein to recruit the basal transcription machinery and activate the expression of target genes, whereas the core domain binds to target DNA in a sequence-specific manner and the majority of mutations found in human tumors occur in the region of the gene encoding this domain (1-3). The C-terminal domain is composed of predominantly basic residues and modification of the C-terminal basic domain, including acetylation, glycosylation and phosphorylation, is an essential mechanism for regulating p53 function (4-6). The His tagged C-terminus-deleted p53 (amino acid 1-363) was expressed in a baculovirus system and purified by affinity and FPLC chromatography. Recombinant p53 can be used for: 1) gel mobility shift assay or for a DNase I footprinting in the presence of double stranded DNA containing a consensus p53-binding sequence [5’-PuPuPuC(A/T)(T/A)GPyPyPy-3’]; 2) in vitro transcription assay; 3) protein-protein interaction assay; and 4) cell growth assay. | | Target Gene Sequence | EPQSDPSVEP PLSQETFSDL WKLLPENNVL SPLPSQAMDD LMLSPDDIEQ WFTEDPGPDE APRMPEAAPP VAPAPAAPTP AAPAPAPSWP LSSSVPSQKT YQGSYGFRLG FLHSGTAKSV TCTYSPALNK MFCQLAKTCP VQLWVDSTPP PGTRVRAMAI YKQSQHMTEV VRRCPHHERC SDSDGLAPPQ HLIRVEGNLR VEYLDDRNTF RHSVVVPYEP PEVGSDCTTI HYNYMCNSSC MGGMNRRPIL TIITLEDSSG NLLGRNSFEV RVCACPGRDR RTEEENLRKK GEPHHELPPG STKRALPNNT SSSPQPKKKP LDGEYFTLQI RGRERFEMFR ELNEALELKD AQAGKEPGGS R | | Storage and Formulation | This protein is stored in 20 mM Tris-Cl (pH 8.0), 20% glycerol, 100 mM KCl, 1 mM DTT and 0.2 mM EDTA. Always store at -80°C. Avoid repeated freeze thaw cycles. | | Application | 1 unit equals 1 nanogram of purified protein. 1 unit is sufficient for a gel mobility shift assay in a 20 µl reaction; 50 units are sufficient for reconstituted transcription assay and 100 units are sufficient for a protein-protein interaction assay. For research use only. | | Reference | 1. Chen, X. et al., (1996) Genes & Dev. 10, 2438-2451 2. El-Deiry, WS. et al., (1992) Nature Genet 1, 45-49 3. Hollstein, M. et al., (1991) Science 253, 49-53 4. Hupp, TR. et al., (1992) Cell 71, 875-886 5. Shaw, P. et al., (1996) Oncogene 12, 20393-20802 6. Gu, W., et al., (1997) Cell 90, 595-606 7. Xu et al., (2005) Nat Cell Bio, 7:165-171 |
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