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p53 recombinant protein

Recombinant Human p53 protein

Gene Names
TP53; P53; BCC7; LFS1; TRP53
Purity
>90% as determined by SDS-PAGE
Synonyms
p53; Recombinant Human p53 protein; Cellular tumor antigen p53; Antigen NY-CO-13; Phosphoprotein p53; Tumor suppressor p53; p53 recombinant protein
Ordering
For Research Use Only!
Host
E Coli
Purity/Purification
>90% as determined by SDS-PAGE
Form/Format
Lyophilized. Lyophilized from PBS pH 7.4, 0.2% NLS, 5% Trehalose, 5% Mannose, 1mM EDTA.
Species
Homo sapiens (Human)
Protein Construction
A DNA sequence encoding the human p53 (Asp7-Asp393) was fused with His tag
Reconstitution
Reconstitute in sterile water for a stock solution.
Preparation and Storage
Store at 2 to 8 degree C for one week. Store at -20 to -80 degree C for twelve months from the date of receipt. Use a manual defrost freezer and avoid repeated freeze thaw cycles.
In general, proteins are provided as lyophilized powder/frozen liquid. They are shipped out with dry ice/blue ice unless customers require otherwise.
Related Product Information for p53 recombinant protein
p53, also known as Tp53, is a DNA-binding protein which belongs to the p53 family. It contains transcription activation, DNA-binding, and oligomerization domains. p53 protein is expressed at low level in normal cells and at a high level in a variety of transformed cell lines, where it's believed to contribute to transformation and malignancy. p53 (TP53) is a transcription factor whose protein levels and post-translational modification state alter in response to cellular stress (such as DNA damage, hypoxia, spindle damage). Activation of p53 begins through a number of mechanisms including phosphorylation by ATM, ATR, Chk1 and MAPKs. MDM2 is a ubiquitn ligase that binds p53 and targets p53 for proteasomal degradation. Phosphorylation, p14ARF and USP7 prevent MDM2-p53 interactions, leading to an increase in stable p53 tetramers in the cytoplasm. Further modifications such as methylation and acetylation lead to an increase in Tp53 binding to gene specific response elements. Tp53 regulates a large number of genes (>1 genes) that control a number of key tumor suppressing functions such as cell cycle arrest, DNA repair, senescence and apoptosis. Whilst the activation of p53 often leads to apoptosis, p53 inactivation facilitates tumor progression. It is postulated to bind to a p53-binding site and activate expression of downstream genes that inhibit growth and/or invasion, and thus function as a tumor suppressor. Mutants of p53 that frequently occur in a number of different human cancers fail to bind the consensus DNA binding site, and hence cause the loss of tumor suppressor activity. Defects in TP53 are a cause of esophageal cancer, Li-Fraumeni syndrome, lung cancer and adrenocortical carcinoma.
Product Categories/Family for p53 recombinant protein

NCBI and Uniprot Product Information

NCBI GI #
NCBI GeneID
NCBI Accession #
NCBI GenBank Nucleotide #
Molecular Weight
43,653 Da
NCBI Official Full Name
cellular tumor antigen p53 isoform a
NCBI Official Synonym Full Names
tumor protein p53
NCBI Official Symbol
TP53
NCBI Official Synonym Symbols
P53; BCC7; LFS1; TRP53
NCBI Protein Information
cellular tumor antigen p53; antigen NY-CO-13; phosphoprotein p53; p53 tumor suppressor; transformation-related protein 53
UniProt Protein Name
Cellular tumor antigen p53
UniProt Gene Name
TP53
UniProt Synonym Gene Names
P53
UniProt Entry Name
P53_HUMAN

NCBI Description

This gene encodes a tumor suppressor protein containing transcriptional activation, DNA binding, and oligomerization domains. The encoded protein responds to diverse cellular stresses to regulate expression of target genes, thereby inducing cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, senescence, DNA repair, or changes in metabolism. Mutations in this gene are associated with a variety of human cancers, including hereditary cancers such as Li-Fraumeni syndrome. Alternative splicing of this gene and the use of alternate promoters result in multiple transcript variants and isoforms. Additional isoforms have also been shown to result from the use of alternate translation initiation codons (PMIDs: 12032546, 20937277). [provided by RefSeq, Feb 2013]

Uniprot Description

p53: a transcription factor and major tumor suppressor that plays a major role in regulating cellular responses to DNA damage and other genomic aberrations. Activation of p53 can lead to either cell cycle arrest and DNA repair or apoptosis. More than 50 percent of human tumors contain a mutation or deletion of the TP53 gene. p53 is modified post-translationally at multiple sites. DNA damage induces phosphorylation of p53 at S15, S20 and S37, reducing its interaction with the oncoprotein MDM2. MDM2 inhibits p53 accumulation by targeting it for ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation. Phosphorylated by many kinases including Chk2 and Chk1 at S20, enhancing its tetramerization, stability and activity. The phosphorylation by CAK at S392 is increased in human tumors and has been reported to influence the growth suppressor function, DNA binding and transcriptional activation of p53. Phosphorylation of p53 at S46 regulates the ability of p53 to induce apoptosis. The acetylation of p53 appears to play a positive role in the accumulation of p53 during the stress response. Following DNA damage, p53 becomes acetylated at K382, enhancing its binding to DNA. Deacetylation of p53 can occur through interaction with SIRT1, a deacetylase that may be involved in cellular aging and the DNA damage response. p53 regulates the transcription of a set of genes encoding endosomal proteins that regulate endosomal functions. These include STEAP3 and CHMP4C, which enhance exosome production, and CAV1 and CHMP4C, which produce a more rapid endosomal clearance of the EGFR from the plasma membrane. DNA damage regulates a p53-mediated secretory pathway, increasing the secretion of some proteins such as Hsp90, SERPINE1, SERPINB5, NKEF-A, and CyPA, and inhibiting the secretion of others including CTSL and IGFBP-2. Two alternatively spliced human isoforms have been reported. Isoform 2 is expressed in quiescent lymphocytes. Seems to be non-functional. May be produced at very low levels due to a premature stop codon in the mRNA, leading to nonsense-mediated mRNA decay.

Protein type: Motility/polarity/chemotaxis; Tumor suppressor; Nuclear receptor co-regulator; DNA-binding; Transcription factor; Activator

Chromosomal Location of Human Ortholog: 17p13.1

Cellular Component: PML body; transcription factor TFIID complex; protein complex; nuclear matrix; mitochondrion; endoplasmic reticulum; replication fork; cytosol; nucleoplasm; nuclear body; mitochondrial matrix; nuclear chromatin; cytoplasm; nucleolus; nucleus; chromatin

Molecular Function: identical protein binding; protease binding; protein phosphatase 2A binding; zinc ion binding; p53 binding; protein N-terminus binding; receptor tyrosine kinase binding; protein kinase binding; protein phosphatase binding; transcription factor binding; histone acetyltransferase binding; protein binding; histone deacetylase regulator activity; copper ion binding; enzyme binding; DNA binding; protein heterodimerization activity; ubiquitin protein ligase binding; chaperone binding; damaged DNA binding; chromatin binding; transcription factor activity; ATP binding

Biological Process: viral reproduction; positive regulation of apoptosis; multicellular organismal development; positive regulation of transcription, DNA-dependent; T cell differentiation in the thymus; gastrulation; determination of adult life span; DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediator resulting in cell cycle arrest; regulation of apoptosis; response to antibiotic; cellular response to glucose starvation; protein localization; negative regulation of neuroblast proliferation; base-excision repair; transforming growth factor beta receptor signaling pathway; cerebellum development; protein complex assembly; cell cycle arrest; ER overload response; response to X-ray; somitogenesis; release of cytochrome c from mitochondria; chromatin assembly; cell aging; circadian behavior; rRNA transcription; positive regulation of peptidyl-tyrosine phosphorylation; negative regulation of DNA replication; negative regulation of fibroblast proliferation; embryonic organ development; positive regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II promoter; regulation of mitochondrial membrane permeability; negative regulation of transcription, DNA-dependent; regulation of tissue remodeling; negative regulation of apoptosis; transcription from RNA polymerase II promoter; G1 DNA damage checkpoint; DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediator; apoptosis; negative regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II promoter; response to salt stress; entrainment of circadian clock by photoperiod; positive regulation of protein oligomerization; negative regulation of cell proliferation; DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediator resulting in transcription of p21 class mediator; positive regulation of histone deacetylation; regulation of transcription, DNA-dependent; T cell proliferation during immune response; positive regulation of neuron apoptosis; double-strand break repair; response to gamma radiation; cell differentiation; DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediator resulting in induction of apoptosis; protein tetramerization; mitochondrial DNA repair; Notch signaling pathway; in utero embryonic development; multicellular organism growth; B cell lineage commitment; cell proliferation; neuron apoptosis; T cell lineage commitment; negative regulation of helicase activity; nucleotide-excision repair; protein import into nucleus, translocation; Ras protein signal transduction; DNA strand renaturation; negative regulation of cell growth; blood coagulation; negative regulation of transforming growth factor beta receptor signaling pathway; response to DNA damage stimulus

Disease: Papilloma Of Choroid Plexus; Pancreatic Cancer; Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma; Breast Cancer; Li-fraumeni Syndrome 1; Osteogenic Sarcoma; Colorectal Cancer; Glioma Susceptibility 1; Adrenocortical Carcinoma, Hereditary; Basal Cell Carcinoma, Susceptibility To, 7; Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Research Articles on p53

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Product Notes

The p53 tp53 (Catalog #AAA1561134) is a Recombinant Protein produced from E Coli and is intended for research purposes only. The product is available for immediate purchase. It is sometimes possible for the material contained within the vial of "p53, Recombinant Protein" to become dispersed throughout the inside of the vial, particularly around the seal of said vial, during shipment and storage. We always suggest centrifuging these vials to consolidate all of the liquid away from the lid and to the bottom of the vial prior to opening. Please be advised that certain products may require dry ice for shipping and that, if this is the case, an additional dry ice fee may also be required.

Precautions

All products in the AAA Biotech catalog are strictly for research-use only, and are absolutely not suitable for use in any sort of medical, therapeutic, prophylactic, in-vivo, or diagnostic capacity. By purchasing a product from AAA Biotech, you are explicitly certifying that said products will be properly tested and used in line with industry standard. AAA Biotech and its authorized distribution partners reserve the right to refuse to fulfill any order if we have any indication that a purchaser may be intending to use a product outside of our accepted criteria.

Disclaimer

Though we do strive to guarantee the information represented in this datasheet, AAA Biotech cannot be held responsible for any oversights or imprecisions. AAA Biotech reserves the right to adjust any aspect of this datasheet at any time and without notice. It is the responsibility of the customer to inform AAA Biotech of any product performance issues observed or experienced within 30 days of receipt of said product. To see additional details on this or any of our other policies, please see our Terms & Conditions page.

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