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Query: UNIPROT:P51532 (
transcriptional activator
)
6,546
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
p53, the tumour suppressor and
transcriptional activator
, is regulated by numerous post-translational modifications, including
lysine
methylation. Histone
lysine
methylation has recently been shown to be reversible; however, it is not known whether non-histone proteins are substrates for demethylation. Here we show that, in human cells, the histone
lysine
-specific demethylase LSD1 (refs 3, 4) interacts with p53 to repress p53-mediated transcriptional activation and to inhibit the role of p53 in promoting apoptosis. We find that, in vitro, LSD1 removes both monomethylation (K370me1) and dimethylation (K370me2) at K370, a previously identified Smyd2-dependent monomethylation site. However, in vivo, LSD1 shows a strong preference to reverse K370me2, which is performed by a distinct, but unknown, methyltransferase. Our results indicate that K370me2 has a different role in regulating p53 from that of K370me1: K370me1 represses p53 function, whereas K370me2 promotes association with the coactivator 53BP1 (p53-binding protein 1) through tandem Tudor domains in 53BP1. Further, LSD1 represses p53 function through the inhibition of interaction of p53 with 53BP1. These observations show that p53 is dynamically regulated by
lysine
methylation and demethylation and that the methylation status at a single
lysine
residue confers distinct regulatory output.
Lysine
methylation therefore provides similar regulatory complexity for non-histone proteins and for histones.
...
PMID:p53 is regulated by the lysine demethylase LSD1. 1780 99
In an acidic (pH 5.8) and
lysine
-rich environment Escherichia coli induces expression of the cadBA operon which encodes CadA, catalysing the decarboxylation of
lysine
to cadaverine, and CadB, the
lysine
/cadaverine antiporter. cadBA expression is dependent on CadC, a membrane-integrated
transcriptional activator
which belongs to the ToxR-like protein family and directly binds to the DNA in the cadBA promoter region. Here we describe that CadC senses the extracellular
lysine
not directly but indirectly requiring the interplay with the
lysine
permease LysP. Biochemical analyses of isolated CadC or the periplasmic domain of CadC (CadC188-512) revealed an unexpectedly low affinity for
lysine
, making it unlikely that CadC is a direct sensor for this substrate. Moreover, CadC hybrid proteins, in which the transmembrane domain or single amino acids were replaced, supported
lysine
-independent cadBA expression but retained a pH-dependent regulation. These CadC mutants were resistant to the effect of an overproduction of LysP, which represses cadBA expression in wild-type cells. Our results suggest a model according to which CadC is inactivated by an interaction with LysP at a low external
lysine
concentration. When
lysine
is abundantly available, the interaction between LysP and CadC is released, and CadC becomes susceptible to activation by low pH.
...
PMID:The membrane-integrated transcriptional activator CadC of Escherichia coli senses lysine indirectly via the interaction with the lysine permease LysP. 1808 2
The AP-1 family member JunB is a critical regulator of T cell function. JunB is a
transcriptional activator
of various cytokine genes, such as IL-2, IL-4, and IL-10; however, the post-translational modifications that regulate JunB activity in T cells are poorly characterized. We show here that JunB is conjugated with small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) on
lysine
237 in resting and activated primary T cells and T cell lines. Sumoylated JunB associated with the chromatin-containing insoluble fraction of cells, whereas nonsumoylated JunB was also in the soluble fraction. Blocking JunB sumoylation by mutation or use of a dominant-negative form of the SUMO-E2 Ubc-9 diminished its ability to transactivate IL-2 and IL-4 reporter genes. In contrast, nonsumoylable JunB mutants showed unimpaired activity with reporter genes controlled by either synthetic 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate response elements or NF-AT/AP-1 and CD28RE sites derived from the IL-2 promoter. Ectopic expression of JunB in activated human primary CD4(+) T cells induced activation of the endogenous IL-2 promoter, whereas the nonsumoylable JunB mutant did not. Thus, our work demonstrates that sumoylation of JunB regulates its ability to induce cytokine gene transcription and likely plays a critical role in T cell activation.
...
PMID:SUMOylation regulates the transcriptional activity of JunB in T lymphocytes. 1842 18
Control of gene expression depends on a complex and delicate balance of various posttranslational modifications of histones. However, the relevance of specific combinations of histone modifications is not fully defined. Downstream effector proteins recognize particular histone modifications and transduce this information into gene expression patterns. Methylation of histone H3 at
lysine
4 (H3K4me) is a landmark of gene expression control in eukaryotes. Its recognition depends on the presence in the effector protein of a motif termed plant homeodomain (PHD) that specifically binds to H3K4me3. Here, we establish that Arabidopsis ORC1, the large subunit of the origin recognition complex involved in defining origins of DNA replication, functions as a
transcriptional activator
of a subset of genes, the promoters of which are preferentially bound by ORC1. Arabidopsis ORC1 contains a PHD and binds to H3K4me3. In addition to H4 acetylation, ORC1 binding correlates with increased H4K20me3 in the proximal promoter region of ORC1 targets. This suggests that H4K20me3, unlike in animal cells, is associated with transcriptional activation in Arabidopsis. Thus, our data provide a molecular basis for the opposite role of ORC1 in transcriptional activation in plants and repression in animals. Since only ORC1 proteins of plant species contain a PHD, we propose that plant ORC1 constitutes a novel class of H3K4me3 effector proteins characteristic of the plant kingdom.
...
PMID:Arabidopsis ORC1 is a PHD-containing H3K4me3 effector that regulates transcription. 1917 93
Association genetics is a powerful method to track gene polymorphisms responsible for phenotypic variation, since it takes advantage of existing collections and historical recombination to study the correlation between large genetic diversity and phenotypic variation. We used a collection of 375 maize (Zea mays ssp. mays) inbred lines representative of tropical, American, and European diversity, previously characterized for genome-wide neutral markers and population structure, to investigate the roles of two functionally related candidate genes, Opaque2 and CyPPDK1, on kernel quality traits. Opaque2 encodes a basic leucine zipper
transcriptional activator
specifically expressed during endosperm development that controls the transcription of many target genes, including CyPPDK1, which encodes a cytosolic pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase. Using statistical models that correct for population structure and individual kinship, Opaque2 polymorphism was found to be strongly associated with variation of the essential amino acid
lysine
. This effect could be due to the direct role of Opaque2 on either zein transcription, zeins being major storage proteins devoid of
lysine
, or
lysine
degradation through the activation of
lysine
ketoglutarate reductase. Moreover, we found that a polymorphism in the Opaque2 coding sequence and several polymorphisms in the CyPPDK1 promoter nonadditively interact to modify both
lysine
content and the protein-versus-starch balance, thus revealing the role in quantitative variation in plants of epistatic interactions between a
transcriptional activator
and one of its target genes.
...
PMID:Epistatic interactions between Opaque2 transcriptional activator and its target gene CyPPDK1 control kernel trait variation in maize. 1932 68
This paper shows that compounds in defined growth media strongly influence the expression of the effectors of virulence in the human invasive pathogen Shigella flexneri. Ornithine in conjunction with uracil reduces the haemolytic ability of wild-type cultures more than 20-fold and the expression of the type III secretion system more than 8-fold, as monitored by an mxiC : : lacZ transcriptional reporter. mxiC gene expression is further decreased by the presence of methionine or branched-chain amino acids (15-fold or 25-fold at least, respectively).
Lysine
and a few other aminated metabolites (cadaverine, homoserine and diaminopimelate) counteract the ornithine-mediated inhibition of haemolytic activity and of the expression of a
transcriptional activator
virF reporter. The complete abolition of invasion of HeLa cells by wild-type bacteria by ornithine, uracil, methionine or branched-chain amino acids establishes that these metabolites are powerful effectors of virulence. These findings provide a direct connection between metabolism and virulence in S. flexneri. The inhibitory potential exhibited by the nutritional environment is stronger than temperature, the classical environmental effector of virulence. The implications and practical application of this finding in prophylaxis and treatment of shigellosis are discussed.
...
PMID:Metabolic control through ornithine and uracil of epithelial cell invasion by Shigella flexneri. 1946 Aug 19
Gene expression control depends on the combinatorial presence of various posttranslational modifications of the N-terminal tail of histones, among which acetylation and methylation of
lysine
residues are the most conspicuous. Effector proteins have been identified that recognize specific histone modifications and transduce the information of the histone code into different degrees of chromatin compaction in either facultative or constitutive heterochromatin. In addition, they also impinge on transcriptional control, either activation or repression, of euchromatic genes. However, a large variety of effector proteins lead to different gene expression readouts. This is complicated by accumulating evidence showing that the consequences of various histone modifications differ among animals and plants. Given the conservation of histone marks, and histone modification enzymes, this has evolutionary implications as to how they are interpreted differently in different organisms. One example that illustrates such diversity of the histone code is the large subunit of the origin recognition complex, ORC1. In plants, but not in yeast and animal cells, ORC1 functions as a
transcriptional activator
of a subset of target genes and is a plant homeodomain (PHD)-containing protein that binds to histone H3K4me3 residues.
...
PMID:Novel insights into the plant histone code: lessons from ORC1. 1948 63
Salmonella Typhimurium CECT 443 inactivation at pH 2.5 in Mineral Medium (MM) and MM supplemented with 0.01% (w/v) arginine,
lysine
or glutamic acid was studied using stationary-phase cells grown in buffered BHI pH 7.0 (non-acid adapted cells) and acidified BHI up to pH 4.5 with acetic, citric, lactic and hydrochloric acids (acid adapted cells). In all cases, acid adapted cells, with D-values ranging from 23.34 to 86.90 min, showed a significantly higher acid resistance than non-acid adapted cells, with D-values between 8.90 and 10.29 min. Whereas the conditions used for acid adaptation did not exert a significant effect on the acid resistance of the S. Typhimurium CECT 443 resulting cells, the inclusion of
lysine
and arginine in the challenge medium protected them against acid inactivation, reaching D-values of about 2 and 3 times higher, respectively, than those found in MM or MM supplemented with glutamic acid. None of these three amino acids significantly modified the acid resistance of non-acid adapted cells. The relative expression level of adiA (encoding the arginine decarboxylase), adiY (encoding the
transcriptional activator
of adiA), cadA (encoding the lysine decarboxylase) and cadB (encoding the
lysine
/cadaverine transport protein) was examined by quantitative PCR. Acid adapted cells showed higher relative expression levels for both systems, arginine decarboxylase and lysine decarboxylase, which demonstrates that the induction of specialized pH-homeostatic systems plays an important role in S. Typhimurium CECT 443 protection against acid stress. However, the increased acid resistance showed by acid adapted cells challenged in MM arginine or
lysine
free suggests the existence of other microbial survival strategies.
...
PMID:Arginine and lysine decarboxylases and the acid tolerance response of Salmonella Typhimurium. 1986 32
Streptomyces clavuligerus NRRL3585 produces a clinically important ss-lactamase inhibitor, clavulanic acid (CA). In order to increase the production of CA, the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) gene was deleted in S. clavuligerus NRRL3585 to overcome the limited glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate pool; the replicative and integrative expressions of ccaR (specific regulator of the CA biosynthetic operon) and claR (
Lys
-type
transcriptional activator
) genes were transformed together into deleted mutant to improve clavulanic acid production. We constructed two recombinant plasmids to enhance the production of CA in the gap1 deletion mutant of S. clavuligerus NRRL3585: pHN11 was constructed for overexpression of ccaR-claR, whereas pHN12 was constructed for their chromosomal integration. Both pHN11 and pHN12 transformants enhanced the production of CA by 2.59-fold and 5.85-fold, respectively, compared to the gap1 deletion mutant. For further enhancement of CA, we fed the pHN11 and pHN12 transformants ornithine and glycerol. Compared to the gap1 deletion mutant, ornithine increased CA production by 3.24- and 6.51-fold in the pHN11 and pHN12 transformants, respectively, glycerol increased CA by 2.96- and 6.21-fold, respectively, and ornithine and glycerol together increased CA by 3.72- and 7.02-fold, respectively.
...
PMID:Enhancement of clavulanic acid production by expressing regulatory genes in gap gene deletion mutant of Streptomyces clavuligerus NRRL3585. 2013 46
Hypoxia plays a major role in the induction of angiogenesis during tumor development. One mechanism by which tumor cells respond to a reduced oxygen level is via the activation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1). HIF-1 is an oxygen-dependent
transcriptional activator
that plays crucial roles in the angiogenesis of tumors and mammalian development. HIF-1 consists of a constitutively expressed HIF-1beta subunit and the highly regulated HIF-1alpha subunits. The stability and activity of HIF-1alpha are regulated by various post-translational modifications, hydroxylation, acetylation, phosphorylation and sumoyaltion. Therefore, HIF-1alpha interacts with several protein factors including PHD, pVHL, ARD-1, SUMO and p300/CBP. Under normoxia, the HIF-1alpha subunit is rapidly degraded via the von Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressor gene product (pVHL)-mediated ubiquitin/proteasome pathway. The association of pVHL and HIF-1alpha under normoxic conditions is triggered by the hydroxylation of prolines and the acetylation of
lysine
within a polypeptide segment known as the oxygen-dependent degradation (ODD) domain. On the contrary, under the hypoxia condition, the HIF-1alpha subunit becomes stable and interacts with coactivators such as p300/CBP to modulate its transcriptional activity. Under hypoxic conditions, HIF-1 eventually acts as a master regulator of numerous hypoxia-inducible genes. The target genes of HIF-1 are especially related to angiogenesis, cell proliferation and survival, and to glucose and iron metabolism. Moreover, it was reported that the activation of HIF-1alpha is closely associated with a variety of tumors and oncogenic pathways. Hence, the blocking of HIF-1alpha itself or the blocking of HIF-1alpha interacting proteins inhibits tumor growth. Based on these findings, HIF-1 can be a prime target for anticancer therapies. Therefore, this review summarizes the molecular mechanism of HIF-1alpha stability, the biological functions of HIF-1 and its potential applications for cancer therapies.
...
PMID:HIF-1alpha: a valid therapeutic target for tumor therapy. 2036 27
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