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Publication : The nuclear factor SPBP contains different functional domains and stimulates the activity of various transcriptional activators.

First Author  Rekdal C Year  2000
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  275
Issue  51 Pages  40288-300
PubMed ID  10995766 Mgi Jnum  J:66382
Mgi Id  MGI:1928403 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M006978200
Citation  Rekdal C, et al. (2000) The nuclear factor SPBP contains different functional domains and stimulates the activity of various transcriptional activators. J Biol Chem 275(51):40288-300
abstractText  SPBP (stromelysin-1 platelet-derived growth factor-responsive element binding protein) was originally cloned from a cDNA expression library by virtue of its ability to bind to a platelet-derived growth factor-responsive element in the human stromelysin-1 promoter. A 937-amino acid-long protein was deduced from a 3995-nucleotide murine cDNA sequence. By analyses of both human and murine cDNAs, we now show that SPBP is twice as large as originally found. The human SPBP gene contains six exons and is located on chromosome 22q13.1-13.3. Two isoforms differing in their C termini are expressed due to alternative splicing. PCR analyses of multitissue cDNA panels showed that SPBP is expressed in most tissues except for ovary and prostate. Functional mapping revealed that SPBP is a nuclear, multidomain protein containing an N-terminal region with transactivating ability, a novel type of DNA-binding domain containing an AT hook motif, and a bipartite nuclear localization signal as well as a C-terminal zinc finger domain. This type of zinc finger domain is also found in the trithorax family of chromatin-based transcriptional regulator proteins. Using cotransfection experiments, we find that SPBP enhances the transcriptional activity of various transcription factors such as c-Jun, Ets1, Sp1, and Pax6. Hence, SPBP seems to act as a transcriptional coactivator.
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