Primary Identifier | IPR002418 | Type | Family |
Short Name | Tscrpt_reg_Myc |
description | The class III basic helix-turn-helix (bHLH) transcription factors have proliferative and apoptotic roles and are characterised by the presence of a leucine zipper adjacent to the bHLH domain. The myc oncogene was first discovered in small-cell lung cancer cell lines where it is found to be deregulated []. The Myc protein contains an N-terminal transcriptional regulatory domain followed by a nuclear localization signal and a C-terminal basic DNA binding domain tethered to a helix-loop-helix-leucine zipper (HLH-Zip) dimerization motif. Myc forms a heterodimer with Max, and this complex regulates cell growth through direct activation of genes involved in cell replication [, , ].The `leucine zipper' is a structure that is believed to mediate the function of several eukaryotic gene regulatory proteins. The zipper consists of a periodic repetition of leucine residues at every seventh position, and regions containing them appear to span eight turns of α-helix. The leucine side chains that extend from one helix interact with those from a similar helix, hence facilitating dimerisation in the form of a coiled-coil. Leucine zippers are present in many gene regulatory proteins, including the CREB proteins, Jun/AP1 transcription factors, fos oncogene and fos-related proteins, C-myc, L-myc and N-myc oncogenes, and so on. |