Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P05412 (c-Jun)
11,453 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Retinoic acid inhibits the enzyme collagenase by forming an inactive complex between the liganded nuclear retinoic acid receptors and c-Jun, a protein that is itself an activator of the collagenase gene.
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PMID:The molecular basis of the inhibition of collagenase by vitamin A. 133 26

Transcription factor AP-1 is constituted by the various products of the fos and jun proto-oncogene family members, which associate as dimers to bind with variable efficiency to 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol 13-acetate (TPA)-responsive promoter elements (TREs). We have recently shown that DNA binding of AP-1 is regulated by an inhibitory protein, IP-1, whose activity is modulated by phosphorylation. Here it is shown that although AP-1 has a very high affinity for its recognition sequence, its binding to the TRE can be quickly inhibited by the addition of IP-1. IP-1 is more active on AP-1 complexes formed during a shorter period of time. IP-1 activity is blocked by stimulation of the protein kinase C (PKC) signal transduction pathway, achieved by treating HeLa cells with phorbol esters or with a diacylglycerol analog. We observed an increase in AP-1-DNA binding after treatment of the cells with either the calcium ionophore A-23187 or dibutyryl cAMP; this could be ascribed to inhibition of IP-1 activity. A decreased IP-1 activity also correlates with the increase in AP-1-DNA binding after stimulating cells with serum. This suggests that IP-1 is an important target of the various signal transduction pathways. No effect on AP-1 and IP-1 was detected in cells transformed by Ki-ras or v-raf; nor could an effect of inhibition of protein synthesis be observed. We also analysed IP-1 regulation upon differentiation of P19 embryonal carcinoma cells by retinoic acid. We conclude that IP-1 regulation has a pivotal role in the final modulation of Fos-Jun by signal transduction pathways.
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PMID:AP-1 (Fos-Jun) regulation by IP-1: effect of signal transduction pathways and cell growth. 143 49

JunB, a member of the jun gene family of transcription factors, is distinguished from c-Jun by its differential activity on certain arrangements of promoter regulatory elements and the ability of JunB to inhibit the action of cJun in both transforming and trans-activating assays. We have tested the potential negative regulatory role of JunB during the retinoic acid induced differentiation of F9 murine embryonal carcinoma cells. Constitutive expression of high levels of JunB in F9 cells failed to inhibit the differentiation dependent induction of c-Jun or the coincident expression of differentiation markers keratin 8 and 18, tissue plasminogen activator, and laminin B1. Among these marker genes, keratin 18, has been shown to contain an AP-1 binding site, TGA(C/G)TCA, which is essential for high level, differentiation dependent expression and which is transactivated by Jun and Fos proteins. These results suggest that JunB does not play a major negative or positive regulatory role during the retinoic acid induced differentiation of F9 cells.
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PMID:JunB does not inhibit the induction of c-Jun during the retinoic acid induced differentiation of F9 cells. 158 7

We present evidence that retinoic acid can down-regulate transcriptional activation by the nuclear protooncogene c-jun. All three members of the retinoic acid receptor (RAR) subfamily (RAR alpha, RAR beta, and RAR gamma) can repress transcriptional induction of the human collagenase gene or a heterologous promoter that contains the collagenase promoter AP-1-binding site. In contrast, the retinoid X receptor fails to repress Jun/AP-1 activity, demonstrating a significant difference between the two regulatory systems through which retinoids exert their transcriptional control. Analysis of RAR alpha mutants in transfection studies reveals that the DNA-binding domain is important for the inhibition of Jun/AP-1 activity, even though the RAR does not bind the collagenase AP-1 site. Rather, gel-retardation assays reveal that bacterially expressed full-length RAR alpha inhibits binding of Jun protein to target DNA. These data suggest that the RAR alpha may form a nonproductive complex with c-Jun and provides a simple mechanisms by which retinoic acid may limit cell growth and possibly malignant progression.
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PMID:Retinoic acid is a negative regulator of AP-1-responsive genes. 164 28

The genes of the Jun family encode components of the TPA-inducible transcription factor AP-1. These genes are induced by a wide variety of extracellular stimuli, such as growth factors, phorbol esters and activators of protein kinase A. We have previously shown that the adenovirus type 5 E1A protein (E1A5) induces c-jun and junB expression in a number of different cell types. In this paper we show that the third member of the Jun family, junD, is also strongly induced by E1A5. Multiple sequences in the junB and junD promoters are responsible for the effects of E1A5. By contrast, adenovirus type 12 E1A (E1A12), like retinoic acid (RA), strongly induces c-jun expression, while expression of junB and junD is not altered. Interestingly, E1A12 expression leads to complete differentiation of P19 EC cells, comparable to the effect of RA on these cells, while E1A5-expressing cells are only partially differentiated.
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PMID:Differential regulation of JunB and JunD by adenovirus type 5 and 12 E1A proteins. 183 51

The proto-oncogene c-jun, a major component of transcription factor AP-1, is expressed at very low levels in undifferentiated embryonal carcinoma (EC) end embryonic stem (ES) cells. Retinoic acid (RA) induced differentiation causes a strong increase in the levels of c-jun mRNA. In this paper we report the cloning and characterization of the mouse c-jun promoter. Our results show that RA treatment causes a strong enhancement in c-jun promoter activity, an effect probably mediated by the RA-receptor beta (RAR beta). Sequences located between -329 and -293 are responsible for the observed RA effect, and bind at least five different protein complexes, of which three are decreased upon RA treatment. These protein binding sites do not resemble RA-responsive elements (RARE's) found in the promoters of retinoic acid receptor beta (RAR beta) and laminin B1. Furthermore, we could not detect a direct interaction of RAR alpha and RAR beta to these sequences, indicating that RA-induced c-jun expression is an indirect effect of RAR action.
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PMID:Transcriptional control of c-jun by retinoic acid. 185 Dec 95

Many essential biological pathways, including cell growth, development, and metabolism, are regulated by thyroid hormones (THs). TH action is mediated by intracellular receptors that belong to a large family of ligand-dependent transcription factors, including the steroid hormone and retinoic acid receptors. So far it has been assumed that TH receptors (TRs) regulate gene transcription only through the classical protein-DNA interaction mechanism. Here we provide evidence for a regulatory pathway that allows cross-talk between TRs and the signal transduction pathway used by many growth factors, oncogenes, and tumor promoters. In transient transfection studies, we observed that the oncogenes c-jun and c-fos inhibit TR activities, while TRs inhibit induction of the c-fos promoter and repress AP-1 site-dependent gene activation. A truncated TR that lacks only 17 amino acids from the carboxy terminus can no longer antagonize AP-1 activity. The cross-regulation between TRs and the signal transduction pathway appears to be based on the ability of TRs to inhibit DNA binding of the transcription factor AP-1 in the presence of THs. The constituents of AP-1, c-Jun, and c-Fos, vice versa, can inhibit TR-induced gene activation in vivo, and c-Jun inhibits TR DNA binding in vitro. This novel regulatory pathway is likely to play a major role in growth control and differentiation by THs.
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PMID:Novel pathway for thyroid hormone receptor action through interaction with jun and fos oncogene activities. 194 74

The regulation of jun family genes and AP1 activity during the course of differentiation of F9 embryonal carcinoma stem cells was investigated. The induction of differentiation by retinoic acid (RA) leads to an accumulation of c-jun mRNA caused by increased c-jun transcription. This induction is an indirect response to RA and requires a functional AP1 binding site within the c-jun promoter. Expression of jun-B mRNA, however, is transiently induced but at a later time point is repressed by RA. The third member of the family, jun-D, is already active in undifferentiated cells and is only slightly induced after differentiation. Differentiation also converts c-jun from being refractory to phorbol esters to a highly inducible state. The development of this response is correlated with increased AP1 activity in RA-treated cells. By contrast, the induction of c-fos by phorbol esters or cAMP is greatly diminished after RA treatment. Transfection experiments indicate that, in the absence of c-Fos, only c-Jun is an effective transactivator. Hence, the major increase in AP1 activity is due to elevated c-jun expression and probably involves positive autoregulation by the c-Jun protein. Furthermore, these results demonstrate that AP1 activity can be stimulated by phorbol ester without concomitant c-fos induction. Forced expression of c-Jun and v-Jun results in activation of at least two differentiation marker genes, EndoB and tissue plasminogen activator, whose regulatory regions contain AP1 binding sites. Thus, the induction of c-jun transcription by RA, although indirect, can have an important role in the differentiation process.
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PMID:Elevation of AP1 activity during F9 cell differentiation is due to increased c-jun transcription. 196 81

We have identified a novel octamer binding factor (Oct-3) in P19 embryonal carcinoma cells. Oct-3, which recognizes the typical octamer motif (ATTTGCAT) as well as the AT-rich sequence TTAAAATTCA, is present in P19 stem cells but disappears when the cells are induced to differentiate by retinoic acid (RA). Cloned cDNA corresponding to Oct-3 encodes a protein of 377 amino acids. Oct-3 has a conserved POU domain, but the remaining part is distinct from other POU domain-containing proteins such as Oct-1 and Oct-2. mRNA of 1.5 kb coding for Oct-3 is abundant in P19 stem cells but is dramatically repressed during RA-induced differentiation. Repression of the 1.5 kb mRNA is rapid and specific to RA. In mouse, oct-3 mRNA is undetectable in all the adult organs examined. The N-terminal proline-rich region of Oct-3, when fused to the DNA binding domain of c-Jun, functions as a transcriptional activating domain. We suggest that Oct-3 is a novel octamer binding transcription factor that is developmentally regulated during mouse embryogenesis.
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PMID:A novel octamer binding transcription factor is differentially expressed in mouse embryonic cells. 196 80

The effect of retinoic acid (RA) on the adipose conversion of 3T3 cells has been studied. Differentiation of 3T3-L1 cells was initiated by addition of 0.5 mM methylisobutylxanthine, 0.3 microM dexamethasone and 10 micrograms/ml insulin (MDI) to confluent monolayers of preadipocytes for 48 h. During this time, the cells underwent DNA replication and cell division prior to the expression of adipose specific genes. RA administration had no apparent effect on the rate or extent of cell growth, cell division, or DNA replication. However, RA treatment concomitant with MDI addition inhibited triacylglycerol accumulation (I0.5 = 6 nM) and the accumulation of the differentiation-dependent mRNAs encoding the adipocyte lipid-binding protein (ALBP) and stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (SCD1). No inhibition occurred with RA addition either prior to or after MDI treatment. Runoff transcription revealed that the inhibitory effects of RA occurred at the level of transcription and were persistent. Cells treated with RA during the MDI regimen did not appreciably transcribe ALBP or SCD1 mRNAs several days following RA withdrawal. The effects of RA were specific for differentiation-dependent transcripts: 10(-6) M RA did not inhibit expression of the mRNAs encoding beta-tubulin or glutamine synthase. Examination of immediate-early transcription factor expression during the MDI regimen revealed that RA mediated an elevated, prolonged expression of c-Jun mRNA accompanied by diminished expression of c-Fos and Jun-B mRNAs. Given the previously demonstrated role of transcription factor AP-1 in ALBP gene expression, our results suggest that the initiation of expression of this and other adipocyte-specific genes during adipose conversion is regulated by the relative composition of transcription factor AP-1.
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PMID:The molecular basis for inhibition of adipose conversion of murine 3T3-L1 cells by retinoic acid. 198 97


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