: It is used to study how p53-dependent pathways can be "re-awakened" in cancer cells or protected in normal cells during stress. By manipulating the APAK-p53 bond, researchers can investigate the protein’s role in tumor survival and its potential as a therapeutic target. Applications in Preclinical Research
: Because APAK specifically regulates the apoptotic function of p53 without affecting its cell-cycle arrest function, it is viewed as a highly specific target for drugs aimed at sensitizing cancer cells to chemotherapy without damaging healthy, non-dividing cells. APAK-212
: In solid tumors, low oxygen levels (hypoxia) can lead to the epigenetic repression of APAK, which unexpectedly triggers p53-dependent apoptosis. Tools that modulate APAK help clarify these complex survival mechanisms. : It is used to study how p53-dependent
In cellular biology, the is a critical tumor suppressor that triggers cell cycle arrest or programmed cell death (apoptosis) in response to DNA damage. However, this process must be tightly controlled to prevent unnecessary cell death in healthy tissues. : In solid tumors, low oxygen levels (hypoxia)
: Under normal (unstressed) conditions, APAK binds to p53 and recruits a corepressor complex (KAP-1 and HDAC1) to inhibit p53’s pro-apoptotic activity.
APAK-212 refers to a synthetic, modular peptide-based construct primarily used in preclinical molecular biology and cancer research. It is specifically designed as a pharmacological tool to modulate the , a KRAB-type zinc finger protein (also known as ZNF420) that acts as a natural negative regulator of p53-mediated apoptosis. Overview of APAK (ZNF420)
The construct is a research-grade tool designed to mimic or interfere with these interactions. Based on its classification in preclinical literature, it typically features: