Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P51532 (transcriptional activator)
6,546 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Widespread localization, responsiveness to numerous signal transduction systems, and broad substrate specificity enable the multifunctional CaM kinase to mediate regulation of many cellular functions. The abundance and diversity of CaM kinase substrates attest to its role as a multifunctional kinase. However, expanded identification of its in situ substrates as well as the consequences of their regulation by phosphorylation needs to be accomplished. Recently identified substrates have contributed to the list of potential functions for the CaM kinase. CREB is a hormonally stimulated transcriptional activator, and CaM kinase may lie on the pathway to its activation. This pathway could provide an interface between the potentiation of Ca2+ signals by CaM kinase and longer-term modifications of neuronal gene expression. The ryanodine receptor, as well as phospholamban, are involved in cardiac Ca2+ homeostasis, and their regulation by CaM kinase phosphorylation suggests the possibility of some feedback control of intracellular Ca2+ levels by CaM kinase. Regulation of neuronal plasticity by phosphorylation of synapsin I and of postsynaptic substrates necessary for long-term potentiation is another dynamic area of investigation. The study of substrates and their functions promises to continue providing exciting insights into the control of cellular signalling by Ca2+. Molecular cloning has enabled structural comparison of neuronal isoforms of the kinase, and has revealed the existence of closely related subunits. Subunits identified to data differ substantially only in two small variable domains, yet their expression in various tissues and during the course of development is precisely controlled. What unique properties do these small variable domains impart to the different isoforms? What directs high concentrations of kinase to a particular subcellular localization, and especially to the PSD? Further molecular cloning will undoubtedly determine whether other multifunctional CaM kinases with unique structures and properties exist. Finally, studies on the autoregulatory properties of CaM kinase have provided a fascinating picture of how this molecule can alone encode responses to Ca2+ signals, potentiating both the duration and magnitude of its activity. Autophosphorylation of the Thr286 autonomy site both traps calmodulin and permits Ca(2+)-independent activity after calmodulin dissociates. Further analysis of the role of the holoenzyme structure in these modulations will help clarify remaining mechanistic questions. Studies performed during the past few years have clearly established that this Ca(2+)-independent activity is generated in situ in response to a variety of cell stimuli.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Neuronal Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinases. 132 38

The expression of the genes encoding the hormones glucagon, insulin, somatostatin, and pancreatic polypeptide in the endocrine islets of the pancreas is regulated in a cell-specific manner, defining four distinct cellular phenotypes (A-, B-, D-, and F-cells, respectively). Binding of nuclear proteins to cognate DNA sequences within cis-acting regulatory elements mediates the transcriptional events that result in the cell-specific activation or repression of gene expression. In a parallel study, we describe the functional properties of the SMS-UE, a pancreatic islet D-cell specific enhancer element that regulates the expression of the somatostatin gene and contains two interdependent domains, A and B. In the studies described herein, we have characterized the nuclear proteins that recognize the SMS-UE. Domain A of the SMS-UE is a DNA enhancer sequence that is identical to that bound by the ubiquitously distributed CCAAT box-binding protein alpha-CBF, a transcription factor that regulates the expression of the human chorionic gonadotrophin alpha-subunit gene. The B-domain, on the other hand, binds an islet cell-specific protein with characteristics similar to those of Isl-1, a transcriptional activator protein that binds to the E2 enhancer of the rat insulin-1 gene. In addition, the SMS-UE binds transcription factor CREB but not CREM, the close homolog of CREB, on a site adjacent to, or overlapping, the 3' end of domain B. We show that the carboxyl-terminal bZIP domain of CREB binds to the cAMP response element of the somatostatin gene but is not sufficient for binding to the SMS-UE, and we present evidence suggesting that CREB.SMS-UE binding requires stabilization by a region of the protein located within the transactivation domain.
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PMID:Somatostatin gene upstream enhancer element activated by a protein complex consisting of CREB, Isl-1-like, and alpha-CBF-like transcription factors. 135 92

In this paper we report the isolation and characterization of the mouse CREB gene. It is composed of 11 exons and 10 introns and spans a region of 70 kb. BR-A and BR-B, the two alpha-helical regions of the proposed basic DNA binding domain of CREB, are encoded separately on exons 10 and 11. The mouse CREB gene is expressed from a promoter that is situated in a CpG island. The promoter contains no TATA or CCAAT box homologies but has a number of putative binding sites for the acidic transcriptional activator Sp1 and a 9/11 match with the initiator region. Transcriptional start site mapping identified five major start sites spread over at least 41 nucleotides. Northern blot analysis indicated that expression of the CREB gene is almost ubiquitous with expression at differing levels of multiple transcripts. Testis expressed a predominant RNA species of approximately 1.6 kb. The CREB gene was found to be single copy in the mouse and well conserved through evolution. Finally Creb-1, the CREB locus, was mapped to the proximal region of mouse chromosome 1.
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PMID:The mouse CREB (cAMP responsive element binding protein) gene: structure, promoter analysis, and chromosomal localization. 138 9

We have identified a Drosophila transcription factor that binds to fat body-specific enhancers of alcohol dehydrogenase (Adh) and yolk protein genes. DNA sequence analysis of cDNA clones encoding this protein, box B-binding factor-2 (BBF-2), indicates that it is a member of the CREB/ATF family of transcriptional regulatory proteins. A number of observations suggest that BBF-2 is involved in fat body-specific expression: Mutations that disrupt BBF-2 binding to two different Adh fat body enhancers in vitro decrease the activity of these enhancers in transgenic flies. BBF-2 mRNA is present in all cell types examined, and the protein is present in cells that express ADH. Finally, BBF-2 is a transcriptional activator in Drosophila tissue culture cells. Remarkably, BBF-2 also binds specifically to regulatory elements required for liver-specific expression of the human Adh and rat tyrosine aminotransferase genes. Thus, BBF-2 and the DNA sequence to which it binds may be important components of a tissue-specific regulatory mechanism conserved between Drosophila and man.
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PMID:A Drosophila CREB/ATF transcriptional activator binds to both fat body- and liver-specific regulatory elements. 153 59

Protein-DNA recognition is often mediated by a small domain containing a recognizable structural motif, such as the helix-turn-helix or the zinc-finger. These motifs are compact structures that dock against the DNA double helix. Another DNA recognition motif, found in a highly conserved family of eukaryotic transcription factors including C/EPB, Fos, Jun and CREB, consists of a coiled-coil dimerization element the leucine-zipper and an adjoining basic region which mediates DNA binding. Here we describe circular dichroism and 1H-NMR spectroscopic studies of another family member, the yeast transcriptional activator GCN4. The 58-residue DNA-binding domain of GCN4, GCN4-p, exhibits a concentration-dependent alpha-helical transition, in accord with previous studies of the dimerization properties of an isolated leucine-zipper peptide. The GCN4-p dimer is approximately 70% helical at 25 degrees C, implying that the basic region adjacent to the leucine zipper is largely unstructured in the absence of DNA. Strikingly, addition of DNA containing a GCN4 binding site (AP-1 site) increases the alpha-helix content of GNC4-p to at least 95%. Thus, the basic region acquires substantial alpha-helical structure when it binds to DNA. A similar folding transition is observed on GCN4-p binding to the related ATF/CREB site, which contains an additional central base pair. The accommodation of DNA target sites of different lengths clearly requires some flexibility in the GCN4 binding domain, despite its high alpha-helix content. Our results indicate that the GCN4 basic region is significantly unfolded at 25 degrees C and that its folded, alpha-helical conformation is stabilized by binding to DNA.
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PMID:Folding transition in the DNA-binding domain of GCN4 on specific binding to DNA. 221 76

The yeast GCN4 transcriptional activator protein binds as a dimer to a dyad-symmetric sequence, indicative of a protein-DNA complex in which two protein monomers interact with adjacent half-sites. However, the optimal GCN4 recognition site, ATGA(C/G)TCAT, is inherently asymmetric because it contains an odd number of base pairs and because mutation of the central C.G base pair strongly reduces specific DNA binding. From this asymmetry, we suggested previously that GCN4 interacts with nonequivalent and possibly overlapping half-sites (ATGAC and ATGAG) that have different affinities. Here, we examine the nature of GCN4 half-sites by creating symmetrical derivatives of the optimal GCN4 binding sequence that delete or insert a single base pair at the center of the site. In vitro, GCN4 bound efficiently to the sequence ATGACGTCAT, whereas it failed to bind to ATGAGCTCAT or ATGATCAT. These observations strongly suggest that (i) GCN4 specifically recognizes the central base pair, (ii) the optimal half-site for GCN4 binding is ATGAC, not ATGAG, and (iii) GCN4 is a surprisingly flexible protein that can accommodate the insertion of a single base pair in the center of its compact binding site. The ATGACGTCAT sequence strongly resembles sites bound by the yeast and mammalian ATF/CREB family of proteins, suggesting that GCN4 and the ATF/CREB proteins recognize similar half-sites but have different spacing requirements. Unexpectedly, in the context of the his3 promoter, the ATGACGTCAT derivative reduced transcription below the basal level in a GCN4-independent manner, presumably reflecting DNA binding by a distinct ATF/CREB-like repressor protein. In other promoter contexts, however, the same site acted as a weak upstream activating sequence.
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PMID:Mutations that define the optimal half-site for binding yeast GCN4 activator protein and identify an ATF/CREB-like repressor that recognizes similar DNA sites. 220 5

The full-length cDNA for a transcriptional activator, DBP, that binds to the D site of the albumin promoter has been cloned. DBP belongs to a family of related transcription factors including Fos, Jun, CREB, and C/EBP, which share a conserved basic domain. However, unlike most other members of this family, DBP does not contain a "leucine zipper" structure. Among several rat tissues tested, significant levels of its protein are only observed in liver; yet, with the exception of testis, DBP mRNA is present in all of the examined tissues. DBP as well as its mRNA accumulate to significant levels only in adult animals. During chemically induced liver regeneration, DBP expression is rapidly down-regulated, suggesting that DBP may be involved in the proliferation control of hepatocytes. This cell growth-dependent expression of DBP, in contrast to its tissue specificity, appears to be controlled at the level of mRNA accumulation.
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PMID:DBP, a liver-enriched transcriptional activator, is expressed late in ontogeny and its tissue specificity is determined posttranscriptionally. 204 17

We have characterized a Drosophila gene that is a highly conserved homolog of the mammalian cyclic AMP (cAMP)-responsive transcription factors CREB and CREM. Uniquely among Drosophila genes characterized to date, it codes for a cAMP-responsive transcriptional activator. An alternatively spliced product of the same gene is a specific antagonist of cAMP-inducible transcription. Analysis of the splicing pattern of the gene suggests that the gene may be the predecessor of the mammalian CREB and CREM genes.
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PMID:A Drosophila CREB/CREM homolog encodes multiple isoforms, including a cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase-responsive transcriptional activator and antagonist. 765 29

Treatment of hamster cells in culture with the DNA alkylating agent N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) induces DNA polymerase beta (beta-pol) gene expression and cellular levels of the enzyme. Transcriptional activity of a cloned beta-pol promoter in transient expression assays is also stimulated. Among the requirements for these responses are methylation damage to genomic DNA, cellular cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and the ATF/CREB site of the cloned beta-pol promoter. In the present study, HeLa cell nuclear extract from MNNG-treated cells was much more active in an in vitro transcription assay than nuclear extract from normal cells. By using an oligonucleotide affinity column to deplete the nuclear extract of ATF/CREB, we showed that the difference was due to ATF/CREB activator. Purified ATF/CREB activator from MNNG-treated cells was approximately 10-fold more active than ATF/CREB purified from normal cells as a transcriptional activator for the depleted nuclear extract. ATF/CREB in the extract from normal cells is known to activate in vitro transcription by increasing the rate of promoter clearance [Narayan, S., Widen, S. G., Beard, W. A., & Wilson, S. H. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 12755-12763]. With ATF/CREB from MNNG-treated cells, the amount of preinitiation complex formed was much greater than with ATF/CREB from normal cells, and the kinetics of both the closed to open preinitiation complex isomerization and promoter clearance were altered. These results indicate that the mechanism of transcriptional activation secondary to DNA alkylation damage is recruitment of more preinitiation complex and alteration of the kinetic scheme of transcription initiation.
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PMID:DNA damage-induced transcriptional activation of a human DNA polymerase beta chimeric promoter: recruitment of preinitiation complex in vitro by ATF/CREB. 781 26

The mammalian transcriptional activator CREB binds as a dimer to a broad spectrum of inducible promoters. CREB activity is modulated by several signalling agents (protein kinase A [PKA], Ca2+, and transforming growth factor beta) and via functional interactions with cell-specific transcription factors. In addition, CREB can activate transcription constitutively and repress the activity of several other transcriptional activators. The mechanisms that allow CREB to act in such a malleable manner and the role that CREB dimerization might play in this are poorly understood. To probe the latter issue, we have created monomeric forms of CREB by fusing CREB to the DNA-binding domain of a protein (B-cell specific activator protein [BSAP]) that binds to DNA as a monomer. Remarkably, monomeric CREB acts as a potent, constitutive activator under conditions in which native CREB is inducible by PKA. Thus, CREB contains constitutive activation regions that are unable to function in native CREB. Two glutamine-rich domains that are important for native, PKA-inducible CREB activity are required for the constitutive activity of monomeric CREB. In contrast, two elements within the kinase-inducible domain of CREB are dispensable for constitutive activity. We discuss our results in relation to inducible and constitutive CREB activity and the potential modes of action of other activators that directly interact with CREB.
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PMID:A monomeric derivative of the cellular transcription factor CREB functions as a constitutive activator. 793 35


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