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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

NF-kappaB1 ( p50) homodimers contribute to transcription of the bcl-2 oncogene.

The bcl-2 proto-oncogene is frequently expressed in human cancer. Although bcl-2 was first cloned as the t(14;18) translocation breakpoint from human follicular B-cell lymphoma, it has become apparent that many cell types express bcl-2 because of transcriptional regulation. As such, several transcription factors have been demonstrated to activate expression of bcl-2, including NF-kappaB. We investigated the role of NF-kappaB1 ( p50) homodimers in the expression of Bcl-2 in two murine B-cell lymphoma cell lines: LY-as, an apoptosis-proficient line with low Bcl-2 protein expression and no nuclear NF-kappaB activity, and LY-ar, a nonapoptotic line with constitutive p50 homodimer activity and 30 times more Bcl-2 protein expression than LY-as. We found that nuclear p50 homodimer activity correlated with Bcl-2 expression in these cell types and identified several sites within the bcl-2 5'-flanking region that p50 was capable of binding. In vitro transcription revealed that recombinant p50 enhanced the production of run-off transcripts from the bcl-2 P1 promoter. Additional in vitro transcription experiments suggested the sites by which p50 afforded this effect. We conclude that the p50 homodimer is capable of transcriptional activation of the bcl-2 gene and suggest that its nuclear activity contributes to the expression of bcl-2 in LY-ar cells.[1]

References

  1. NF-kappaB1 (p50) homodimers contribute to transcription of the bcl-2 oncogene. Kurland, J.F., Kodym, R., Story, M.D., Spurgers, K.B., McDonnell, T.J., Meyn, R.E. J. Biol. Chem. (2001) [Pubmed]
 
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