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Query: UNIPROT:P05412 (
c-Jun
)
11,453
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The origins of DNA replication (ori) in simian virus 40 (SV40) and polyomavirus (Py) contain an auxiliary component (aux-2) composed of multiple transcription factor binding sites. To determine whether this component stimulated replication by binding specific transcription factors, aux-2 was replaced by synthetic oligonucleotides that bound a single transcription factor.
Sp1
and T-antigen (T-ag) sites, which exist in the natural SV40 aux-2 sequence, provided approximately 75 and approximately 20%, respectively, of aux-2 activity when transfected into monkey cells. In cell extracts, only T-ag sites were active. AP1 binding sites could replace completely either SV40 or Py aux-2. Mutations that eliminated AP1 binding also eliminated AP1 stimulation of replication. Yeast GAL4 binding sites that strongly stimulated transcription in the presence of GAL4 proteins failed to stimulate SV40 DNA replication, although they did partially replace Py aux-2. Stimulation required the presence of proteins consisting of the GAL4 DNA binding domain fused to specific activation domains such as VP16 or
c-Jun
. These data demonstrate a clear role for transcription factors with specific activation domains in activating both SV40 and Py ori. However, no correlation was observed between the ability of specific proteins to stimulate promoter activity and their ability to stimulate origin activity. We propose that only transcription factors whose specific activation domains can interact with the T-ag initiation complex can stimulate SV40 and Py ori-core activity.
...
PMID:Specific transcription factors stimulate simian virus 40 and polyomavirus origins of DNA replication. 131 5
Using rigorous statistical methods, we have identified and evaluated unusual properties of the distribution of charged residues within the sequences of eukaryotic cellular transcription factors. Virtually all transcription factors, including GAL4,
c-Jun
, C/EBP, CREB, Oct-1, Oct-2,
Sp1
, Egr-1, CTF-1, steroid and thyroid hormone receptors, and others, carry one or more highly significant charge clusters. For the most part these clusters (conserved within families of homologous proteins) are of positive net charge but contain also substantial numbers of acidic residues. Predominantly basic charge clusters are often, but not exclusively, associated with DNA-binding domains, and vice versa. Negative charge clusters of note occur only in the yeast protein PHO4 and in the proteins encoded at the Drosophila loci zeste (zeta) and knrl. This dearth of statistically significant negative charge clusters raises questions with respect to the generality of acidic activation domains. A number of sequences (Oct-1, Oct-2, zeste, Dhr23, E75, and knrl) contain multiple charge clusters together with one or more significantly long uncharged regions. The occurrence of multiple charge clusters is a rare phenomenon (found in less than 3% of all proteins, mainly in Drosophila developmental control proteins and in transactivators of eukaryotic DNA viruses). Most of the proteins with zinc-binding "fingers" carry a mixed charge cluster centered at the zinc-finger motif preceded by a long uncharged stretch, suggestive of a modular structure for these proteins.
...
PMID:Association of charge clusters with functional domains of cellular transcription factors. 256 37
Studies have demonstrated that the retinoblastoma susceptibility gene product, RB, can either positively or negatively regulate expression of several genes through cis-acting elements in a cell-type-dependent manner. The nucleotide sequence of the retinoblastoma control element (RCE) motif, GCCACC or CCACCC, and the
Sp1
consensus binding sequence, CCGCCC, can confer equal responsiveness to RB. Here, we report that RB activates transcription of the c-jun gene through the
Sp1
-binding site within the c-jun promoter. Preincubation of crude nuclear extracts with monoclonal antibodies to RB results in reduction of
Sp1
complexes in a mobility shift assay, while addition of recombinant RB in mobility shift assay mixtures with CCL64 cell extracts leads to an enhancement of DNA-binding activity of SP1. These results suggest that RB is directly or indirectly involved in
Sp1
-DNA binding activity. A mechanism by which RB regulates transactivation is indicated by our detection of a heat-labile and protease-sensitive
Sp1
negative regulator(s) (
Sp1
-I) that specifically inhibits
Sp1
binding to a c-jun
Sp1
site. This inhibition is reversed by addition of recombinant RB proteins, suggesting that RB stimulates
Sp1
-mediated transactivation by liberating
Sp1
from
Sp1
-I. Additional evidence for
Sp1
-I involvement in
Sp1
-mediated transactivation was demonstrated by cotransfection of RB, GAL4-
Sp1
, and a GAL4-responsive template into CV-1 cells. Finally, we have identified
Sp1
-I, a approximately 20-kDa protein(s) that inhibits the
Sp1
complexes from binding to DNA and that is also an RB-associated protein. These findings provide evidence for a functional link between two distinct classes of oncoproteins, RB and
c-Jun
, that are involved in the control of cell growth, and also define a novel mechanism for the regulation of c-jun expression.
...
PMID:The retinoblastoma gene product RB stimulates Sp1-mediated transcription by liberating Sp1 from a negative regulator. 800 47
The intracellular nonlysosomal calcium-dependent cysteine protease, m-calpain, is shown to specifically cleave the bHLHzip transcription factor USF leaving the binding and dimerisation domains intact. The resultant protein is capable of efficient DNA binding but is no longer able to activate transcription. A surprisingly high proportion of other transcription factors tested, AP1 (c-Fos/
c-Jun
), Pit-1, Oct-1, CP1a and b, c-Myc, ATF/CREB, AP2 and AP3 but not
Sp1
, were similarly cleaved by m-calpain to produce specific partial digestion products. These properties make m-calpain a particularly useful protease for proteolytic studies of transcription factors and also raise the possibility that m-calpain may be involved in vivo in regulation of turnover or transcriptional activity of a number of transcription factors.
...
PMID:Specific cleavage of transcription factors by the thiol protease, m-calpain. 825 62
The 5' region of the acetylcholinesterase gene from the electric ray Torpedo californica has been cloned and its cap site identified. The 5' untranslated region is divided into two exons where a small exon extending between bp -22 to -60 is alternatively spliced. Cap sites are defined at two positions, bp -138 and -143. Twenty-one base pairs 5' of the -143 cap site a repeating TATA sequence is found. Further upstream in the gene consensus sequences for
Sp1
, AP1, and AP2 factors are evident. The promoter region of the acetylcholinesterase gene enhances transcription of a luciferase reporter gene transfected into C2 myoblasts. However, increased transcription was not evident after C2 myoblasts were induced to form myotubes. Cotransfection of this construct with
c-Jun
(AP1) and AP2 expression vectors shows marked increases of transcription rates in HepG2 and C2 cells. Protein kinase A elicited regulation of expression is also evident in quail fibroblasts. In gel retardation experiments both recombinant
c-Jun
(AP1) and AP2 proteins bind to the appropriate Torpedo sequences. Cellular extracts from the Torpedo electric organ exhibit AP2 binding activity. Thus, although all facets of specific regulation expected upon differentiation of mammalian muscle cells were not evident, the 5'-flanking region from the Torpedo AChE gene contains consensus sequences and functional promoter elements typical of mammalian nerve and muscle systems.
...
PMID:Promoter elements and transcriptional regulation of the acetylcholinesterase gene. 842 73
We have investigated the molecular and biochemical basis for activation of interleukin 3 (IL3) gene expression in primary human T lymphocytes following CD3 and CD2 receptor stimulation or activation by phytohemagglutinin plus phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. Using transfection and reporter gene assays specifically designed for primary T lymphocytes in conjunction with gel retardation assays, Western blot analyses and UV cross-linking studies, we found that
c-Jun
, c-Fos, and octamer-binding proteins play a major role in transcriptional activation of the IL3 gene via their interaction with two specific regions contained within the IL3 5'-flanking sequence. Additionally, the region between bases -107 and -59 of the IL3 promoter containing putative AP-2 and
Sp1
binding motifs appears necessary for basal level expression of the IL3 gene. The data also indicate that CD2 receptor activation and phytohemagglutinin plus phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate stimulation augment T cell IL3 gene expression through the same cis- and trans-activating signals. These results should contribute to a better understanding of the regulation of IL3 gene expression in human T lymphocytes.
...
PMID:Transcriptional regulation of interleukin 3 (IL3) in primary human T lymphocytes. Role of AP-1- and octamer-binding proteins in control of IL3 gene expression. 845 3
We have characterized the 5'-flanking region of the alpha-subunit gene of the human pyruvate dehydrogenase (E1). DNase I footprinting with rat liver nuclear extracts identified 7 major protein-binding domains termed P1 through P7 in a 796 base pair DNA fragment (base pairs -763 to +33). P1 through P4 are clustered in the -221/+33 region. These protein-binding domains contain several known consensus sequences such as a TATA box, CAAT box,
Sp1
, and CRE, which all have previously been implicated in the constitutive transcription of several genes. Oligonucleotide competition studies indicate that oligonucleotides specific for CTF/NF-1 and
Sp1
displaced the nuclear proteins bound to the CAAT box (within P3) and an
Sp1
site (within P4), respectively. Several other well-characterized and purified transactivators (c-Fos,
c-Jun
, C/EBP, AP-2, and
Sp1
) have been shown to bind to the -221/+33 region. Other elements located upstream of the -221/+33 region, which includes nuclease protection domains P5-P7, are required for enhanced promoter activity of the 796 bp sequence. Promoter activity was measured by transient expression of a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene ligated to deletion fragments of the 5'-flanking region. Crucial element(s) for promoter activity and complex DNA-nuclear protein interactions were confined within a region spanning -221/+33. This region also retained more than 75% of the promoter activity of the 796 bp sequence. Additionally, this promoter region shows characteristics of both facultative and housekeeping gene promoters, suggesting complex transcriptional regulation.
...
PMID:Multiple protein-binding domains and functional cis-elements in the 5'-flanking region of the human pyruvate dehydrogenase alpha-subunit gene. 847 54
We studied the effects of bile acids on inducibility of the
transcription factor AP-1
in human colon carcinoma LoVo cells. Firstly, cells were treated with chenodeoxycholic acid and the nuclear extracts from those cells were processed by electrophoretic mobility shift assays to analyze nuclear AP-1 DNA-binding activity. We demonstrated that chenodeoxycholic acid induced AP-1 DNA-binding activity in a dose- and time-dependent fashion. Antibody supershift experiments clearly revealed that the majority of protein components in induced AP-1 DNA-binding activity were the products of oncogenes c-fos and c-jun. On the other hand, DNA-binding activity in the nuclear extracts for either NF kappa B,
Sp1
, or ATF/CREB was not affected by bile acids, suggesting that the effect of bile acids was rather specific for AP-1. Transient transfection experiments supported this notion: expression of the AP-1-luciferase reporter construct was induced by bile acids in a dose-dependent manner, and expression of either reporter construct for NF kappa B,
Sp1
, or ATF/CREB was not influenced by treatment of the cells with bile acids. We also demonstrated that those bile acids efficiently activated AP-1-dependent promoter in DLD-1 cells, which (as well as LoVo cells), are derived from colon adenocarcinoma, but not in COLO320DM cells which are from colon carcinoid tumor. Thus, we may indicate that bile acids exclusively induce nuclear AP-1 activity in colon adenocarcinoma cells.
...
PMID:Induction of the transcription factor AP-1 in cultured human colon adenocarcinoma cells following exposure to bile acids. 863 Nov 27
Tissue factor (TF) expression by peripheral blood monocytes during sepsis initiates intravascular thrombosis. Bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) rapidly induces TF gene transcription in monocytes. The human TF promoter contains binding sites for the transcription factors AP-1, c-Rel/p65, Egr-1, and
Sp1
. NF-kappa B/Rel proteins have been shown to physically interact with both AP-1 and
Sp1
proteins. In this study, we investigated the role of these transcription factors in uninduced and LPS-induced TF gene expression in human monocytic THP-1 cells. Deletional analysis indicated that five
Sp1
sites mediated basal expression in uninduced cells. The two AP-1 sites bound c-Fos/
c-Jun
heterodimers in both unstimulated and LPS-stimulated cells. Maximal LPS induction of the TF promoter required the two AP-1 sites and the kappa B site within the LPS response element. Disruption of the conserved spacing between the proximal AP-1 site and the kappa B site abolished LPS induction. Replacement of the two AP-1 sites with intrinsically bent DNA partially restored LPS induction, suggesting an additional structural role for the AP-1 sites. Synergistic transactivation of the LPS response element in Drosophila Schneider cells by coexpression of c-Fos,
c-Jun
, c-Rel, and p65 or
c-Jun
and p65 required the transactivation domains of
c-Jun
and p65. These data indicated that c-Fos/
c-Jun
, c-Rel/p65, and
Sp1
regulate TF gene expression in human monocytic cells.
...
PMID:Regulation of the tissue factor gene in human monocytic cells. Role of AP-1, NF-kappa B/Rel, and Sp1 proteins in uninduced and lipopolysaccharide-induced expression. 908 93
Type VII collagen is the major component of anchoring fibrils, structural elements that stabilize the attachment of the basement membrane to the underlying dermis. In this study, we have dissected the human type VII collagen gene (COL7A1) promoter to characterize the cis-elements responsible for the expression of the gene in cultured fibroblasts and keratinocytes. Using transient cell transfections with various 5' end deletion COL7A1 promoter/chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene plasmid constructs, we determined that the region between nucleotides -524 and -456, relative to the transcription start site, is critical for high promoter activity in both cell types studied. Gel mobility shift assays using several DNA fragments spanning this region identified a GT-rich sequence between residues -512 and -505, necessary for the binding of nuclear proteins to this region of the promoter. Point mutations abolished the binding of nuclear proteins in gel shift assays and drastically diminished the activity of the promoter in transient cell transfections. Supershift assays with antibodies against various transcription factors including
Sp1
, Sp3,
c-Jun
/AP-1, and AP-2, and competition experiments with oligonucleotides containing consensus sequences for
Sp1
and AP-1 binding identified
Sp1
as the transcription factor binding to this region of the COL7A1 promoter. Indeed, recombinant human
Sp1
was shown to bind the COL7A1 promoter GT-rich element but not its mutated form in gel mobility shift assays. In addition, co-transfection of pPacSp1, an expression vector for
Sp1
, together with the COL7A1 promoter/chloramphenicol acetyltransferase construct into
Sp1
-deficient Drosophila Schneider SL2 cells unequivocally demonstrated that
Sp1
is essential for high expression of the COL7A1 gene. These data represent the first in-depth analysis of the human COL7A1 promoter transcriptional control.
...
PMID:A GT-rich sequence binding the transcription factor Sp1 is crucial for high expression of the human type VII collagen gene (COL7A1) in fibroblasts and keratinocytes. 909 67
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