We designed a series of nine-residue peptides that bound to a defined site on the tumor suppressor p53 and stabilized it against denaturation. To test whether the peptides could act as chaperones and rescue the tumor-suppressing function of oncogenic mutants of p53 in living cells, we treated human tumor cells with the fluorescein-labeled peptide Fl-CDB3 (fluorescent derivative of CDB3). Before treatment, the mutant p53 in the cell was predominantly denatured. Fl-CDB3 was taken up into the cytoplasm and nucleus and induced a substantial up-regulation of wild-type p53 protein and representative mutants. The mutants, His-273 and His-175 p53, adopted the active conformation, with a dramatic decrease in the fraction of denatured protein. In all cases, there was p53-dependent induction of expression of the p53 target genes mdm2, gadd45, and p21, accompanied by p53-dependent partial restoration of apoptosis. Fl-CDB3 sensitized cancer cells that carried wild-type p53 to p53-dependent gamma-radiation-induced apoptosis. Although Fl-CDB3 did not elicit a full biological response, it did bind to and rescue p53 in cells and so can serve as a lead for the development of novel drugs for anticancer therapy.