1. The inv(16) fusion protein associates with corepressors via a smooth muscle myosin heavy-chain domain.
- Author
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Durst KL, Lutterbach B, Kummalue T, Friedman AD, and Hiebert SW
- Subjects
- 3T3 Cells, Animals, COS Cells, Core Binding Factor Alpha 2 Subunit, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Dimerization, Gene Deletion, Histone Deacetylases metabolism, Humans, Immunoblotting, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute genetics, Mice, Mutation, Plasmids metabolism, Protein Binding, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Recombinant Fusion Proteins metabolism, Repressor Proteins metabolism, Sin3 Histone Deacetylase and Corepressor Complex, Subcellular Fractions, Transcription, Genetic, Transfection, Chromosome Inversion, DNA-Binding Proteins chemistry, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute metabolism, Myosin Heavy Chains chemistry, Oncogene Proteins, Fusion metabolism, Proto-Oncogene Proteins, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins, Smooth Muscle Myosins chemistry, Transcription Factors chemistry, Transcription Factors metabolism
- Abstract
Inversion(16) is one of the most frequent chromosomal translocations found in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), occurring in over 8% of AML cases. This translocation results in a protein product that fuses the first 165 amino acids of core binding factor beta to the coiled-coil region of a smooth muscle myosin heavy chain (CBFbeta/SMMHC). CBFbeta interacts with AML1 to form a heterodimer that binds DNA; this interaction increases the affinity of AML1 for DNA. The CBFbeta/SMMHC fusion protein cooperates with AML1 to repress the transcription of AML1-regulated genes. We show that CBFbeta/SMMHC contains a repression domain in the C-terminal 163 amino acids of the SMMHC region that is required for inv(16)-mediated transcriptional repression. This minimal repression domain is sufficient for the association of CBFbeta/SMMHC with the mSin3A corepressor. In addition, the inv(16) fusion protein specifically associates with histone deacetylase 8 (HDAC8). inv(16)-mediated repression is sensitive to HDAC inhibitors. We propose a model whereby the inv(16) fusion protein associates with AML1 to convert AML1 into a constitutive transcriptional repressor.
- Published
- 2003
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