Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Jul 2023)

Butein inhibits cancer cell growth by rescuing the wild-type thermal stability of mutant p53

  • Bin Song,
  • Jiajian Wang,
  • Yixin Ren,
  • Yongnan Su,
  • Xueye Geng,
  • Fan Yang,
  • Hao Wang,
  • Jihong Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 163
p. 114773

Abstract

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p53 is a transcription factor that activates the expression of various genes involved in the maintenance of genomic stability, and more than 50% of cancers harbor inactivating p53 mutations, which are indicative of highly aggressive cancer and poor prognosis. Pharmacological targeting of mutant p53 to restore the wild-type p53 tumor-suppressing function is a promising strategy for cancer therapy. In this study, we identified a small molecule, Butein, that reactivates mutant p53 activity in tumor cells harboring the R175H or R273H mutation. Butein restored wild-type-like conformation and DNA-binding ability in HT29 and SK-BR-3 cells harboring mutant p53-R175H and mutant p53-R273H, respectively. Moreover, Butein enabled the transactivation of p53 target genes and decreased the interactions of Hsp90 with mutant p53-R175H and mutant p53-R273H proteins, while Hsp90 overexpression reversed targeted p53 gene activation. In addition, Butein induced thermal stabilization of wild-type p53, mutant p53-R273H and mutant p53-R175H, as determined via CETSA. From docking study, we further proved that Butein binding to p53 stabilized the DNA-binding loop-sheet-helix motif of mutant p53-R175H and regulated its DNA-binding activity via an allosteric mechanism, conferring wild-type-like the DNA-binding activity of mutant p53. Collectively, the data suggest that Butein is a potential antitumor agent that restores p53 function in cancers harboring mutant p53-R273H or mutant p53-R175H. Significance: Butein restores the ability of mutant p53 to bind DNA by reversing its transition to the Loop3 (L3) state, endows p53 mutants with thermal stability and re-establishes their transcriptional activity to induce cancer cell death.

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