Pyrimidine Triones as Potential Activators of p53 Mutants
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Date
2024
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University of California, Irvine
Abstract
p53 is a crucial tumor suppressor in vertebrates that is frequently mutated in human cancers.
Most mutations are missense mutations that render p53 inactive in suppressing tumor initiation and
progression. Developing small-molecule drugs to convert mutant p53 into an active, wild-type-like
conformation is a significant focus for personalized cancer therapy. Prior research indicates that
reactivating p53 suppresses cancer cell proliferation and tumor growth in animal models. Early
clinical evidence with a compound selectively targeting p53 mutants with substitutions of tyrosine
220 suggests potential therapeutic benefits of reactivating p53 in patients. This study identifies
and examines the UCI-1001 compound series as a potential corrector for several p53 mutations.
The findings indicate that UCI-1001 treatment in p53 mutant cancer cell lines inhibits growth and
reinstates wild-type p53 activities, including DNA binding, target gene activation, and induction of
cell death. Cellular thermal shift assays, conformation-specific immunofluorescence staining, and
differential scanning fluorometry suggest that UCI-1001 interacts with and alters the conformation of
mutant p53 in cancer cells. These initial results identify pyrimidine trione derivatives of the UCI-1001
series as candidates for p53 corrector drug development.
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Keywords
CETSA, DSF, cancer, mutant p53, p53 corrector, p53 reactivator, tumor suppressor.