The chromatin scaffold protein SAFB1 localizes SUMO-1 to the promoters of ribosomal protein genes to facilitate transcription initiation and splicing. Liu, HW; Banerjee, T; Guan, X; Freitas, MA; Parvin, JD Nucleic acids research
43
3605-13
2015
Abstract anzeigen
Early steps of gene expression are a composite of promoter recognition, promoter activation, RNA synthesis and RNA processing, and it is known that SUMOylation, a post-translational modification, is involved in transcription regulation. We previously found that SUMO-1 marks chromatin at the proximal promoter regions of some of the most active housekeeping genes during interphase in human cells, but the SUMOylated targets on the chromatin remained unclear. In this study, we found that SUMO-1 marks the promoters of ribosomal protein genes via modification of the Scaffold Associated Factor B (SAFB) protein, and the SUMOylated SAFB stimulated both the binding of RNA polymerase to promoters and pre-mRNA splicing. Depletion of SAFB decreased RNA polymerase II binding to promoters and nuclear processing of the mRNA, though mRNA stability was not affected. This study reveals an unexpected role of SUMO-1 and SAFB in the stimulatory coupling of promoter binding, transcription initiation and RNA processing. | | 25800734
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B-Myb switches from Cyclin/Cdk-dependent to Jnk- and p38 kinase-dependent phosphorylation and associates with SC35 bodies after UV stress. Werwein, E; Dzuganova, M; Usadel, C; Klempnauer, KH Cell death & disease
4
e511
2013
Abstract anzeigen
B-Myb is a highly conserved member of the Myb transcription factor family that has essential roles in cell-cycle progression. Recent work has suggested that B-Myb is also involved in the cellular DNA-damage response. Here, we have investigated the fate of B-Myb in UV-irradiated cells. UV stress leads to the appearance of phosphorylated B-Myb in nuclear SC35 speckles during transcriptional shutdown. Furthermore, we show that UV irradiation leads to a change of the phosphorylation pattern of B-Myb, which is caused by a switch from Cyclin/Cdk-dependent to Jnk and p38 kinase-dependent phosphorylation. Taken together, we have identified Jnk and p38 kinase as novel regulators of B-Myb and established the localization of phosphorylated B-Myb in SC35 speckles as a potential novel regulatory mechanism for B-Myb in UV irradiated cells. | Immunofluorescence | 23449447
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HOXC6 Is transcriptionally regulated via coordination of MLL histone methylase and estrogen receptor in an estrogen environment. Ansari, KI; Hussain, I; Shrestha, B; Kasiri, S; Mandal, SS J Mol Biol
411
334-49
2010
Abstract anzeigen
Homeobox (HOX)-containing gene HOXC6 is a critical player in mammary gland development and milk production, and is overexpressed in breast and prostate cancers. We demonstrated that HOXC6 is transcriptionally regulated by estrogen (E2). HOXC6 promoter contains two putative estrogen response elements (EREs), termed as ERE1(1/2) and ERE2(1/2). Promoter analysis using luciferase-based reporter assay demonstrated that both EREs are responsive to E2, with ERE1(1/2) being more responsive than ERE2(1/2). Estrogen receptors (ERs) ERα and ERβ bind to these EREs in an E2-dependent manner, and antisense-mediated knockdown of ERs suppressed the E2-dependent activation of HOXC6 expression. Similarly, knockdown of histone methylases MLL2 and MLL3 decreased the E2-mediated activation of HOXC6. However, depletion of MLL1 or MLL4 showed no significant effect. MLL2 and MLL3 were bound to the HOXC6 EREs in an E2-dependent manner. In contrast, MLL1 and MLL4 that were bound to the HOXC6 promoter in the absence of E2 decreased upon exposure to E2. MLL2 and MLL3 play key roles in histone H3 lysine-4 trimethylation and in the recruitment of general transcription factors and RNA polymerase II in the HOXC6 promoter during E2-dependent transactivation. Nuclear receptor corepressors N-CoR and SAFB1 were bound in the HOXC6 promoter in the absence of E2, and that binding was decreased upon E2 treatment, indicating their critical roles in suppressing HOXC6 gene expression under nonactivated conditions. Knockdown of either ERα or ERβ abolished E2-dependent recruitment of MLL2 and MLL3 into the HOXC6 promoter, demonstrating key roles of ERs in the recruitment of these mixed lineage leukemias into the HOXC6 promoter. Overall, our studies demonstrated that HOXC6 is an E2-responsive gene, and that histone methylases MLL2 and MLL3, in coordination with ERα and ERβ, transcriptionally regulate HOXC6 in an E2-dependent manner. | | 21683083
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SAFB2, a new scaffold attachment factor homolog and estrogen receptor corepressor. Townson, Steven M, et al. J. Biol. Chem., 278: 20059-68 (2003)
2003
Abstract anzeigen
We have characterized previously the nuclear matrix protein/scaffold attachment factor (SAFB) as an estrogen receptor corepressor and as a potential tumor suppressor gene in breast cancer. A search of the human genome for other potential SAFB family members revealed that KIAA00138 (now designated as SAFB2) has high homology to SAFB (now designated as SAFB1). SAFB1 and SAFB2 are mapped adjacent to each other on chromosome 19p13.3 and are arranged in a bidirectional divergent configuration (head to head), being separated by a short (<500 bp) GC-rich intergenic region that can function as a bidirectional promoter. SAFB1 and SAFB2 share common functions but also have unique properties. As shown previously for SAFB1, SAFB2 functions as an estrogen receptor corepressor, and its overexpression results in inhibition of proliferation. SAFB1 and SAFB2 interact directly through a C-terminal domain, resulting in additive repression activity. They are coexpressed in a number of tissues, but unlike SAFB1, which is exclusively nuclear, SAFB2 is found in the cytoplasm as well as the nucleus. Consistent with its cytoplasmic localization, we detected an interaction between SAFB2 and vinexin, a protein involved in linking signaling to the cytoskeleton. Our findings suggest that evolutionary duplication of the SAFB gene has allowed it to retain crucial functions, but also to gain novel functions in the cytoplasm and/or nucleus. | Immunoblotting (Western) | 12660241
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Tamoxifen-bound estrogen receptor (ER) strongly interacts with the nuclear matrix protein HET/SAF-B, a novel inhibitor of ER-mediated transactivation. Oesterreich, S, et al. Mol. Endocrinol., 14: 369-81 (2000)
1999
Abstract anzeigen
The estrogen receptor (ER) is a ligand-dependent transcription factor that acts in a cell- and promoter-specific manner. Evidence suggests that the activity of the ER can be regulated by a number of other stimuli (e.g. growth factors) and that the effects of the ER are modulated by nuclear factors termed coregulators. While the interplay among these factors may in part explain the pleiotropic effects elicited by the ER, there are several other less well described mechanisms of control, such as interactions with the nuclear matrix. Here we report that the nuclear matrix protein/scaffold attachment factor HET/SAF-B is an ER-interacting protein. ER and HET/SAF-B interact in in vitro binding assays, with HET binding to both the ER DNA-binding domain and the hinge region. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments reveal that HET/SAF-B and ER associate in cell lines in the presence or absence of estradiol, but binding is increased by the antiestrogen tamoxifen. HET/SAF-B enhances tamoxifen antagonism of estrogen-induced ER-mediated transactivation, but at high concentrations can inhibit both estrogen and tamoxifen-induced ER activity. HET/SAF-B-mediated repression of ER activity is dependent upon interaction with the ER-DBD. While the existence of high-affinity binding sites for the ER in the nuclear matrix has been known for some time, we now provide evidence of a specific nuclear matrix protein binding to the ER. Furthermore, our data showing that HET/SAF-B binds to ER particularly strongly in the presence of tamoxifen suggests that it may be important for the antagonist effect of tamoxifen. | | 10707955
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