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

The retinoblastoma binding factor 1 (RBF-1) site in RB gene promoter binds preferentially E4TF1, a member of the Ets transcription factors family.

The tumor suppressor retinoblastoma gene product, pRB, is a well known regulator of G1/S cell cycle progression. Moreover, mutational inactivations within the retinoblastoma gene (RB) are found in many human malignant tumors, and thus, believed to be an essential step in tumor formation. The human RB gene is considered as a housekeeping gene with no characteristic TATA or CAAT elements in its promoter region, but the sequence between 206 and 185 bases upstream of the initiation codon, essential for RB promoter activity, contains putative Sp1 and ATF recognition sites. We have previously reported that point mutations in this region, causing low penetrance retinoblastomas, completely reduced RB promoter activity, and that a nuclear factor, named RBF-1 (retinoblastoma binding factor 1), could specifically bind to this sequence, overlapping Sp1 recognition sequence. We show here, that RBF-1 can recognize a specific DNA sequence, 5'-GGCGGAAGT-3', overlapping the Sp1 and ATF sites and corresponding to the consensus DNA binding site for members of Ets transcription factors family. When RBF-1 site was used for sequence specific DNA affinity purification from erythroleukemia cells, reconstitution assays, immunoblotting analysis and peptide mapping show that the two major co-purified proteins are identical to human E4TF1-60 and -53 proteins. This reveals that E4TF1 can bind to the RBF-1 site of RB gene promoter, which, thus, constitutes a new target for this member of Ets transcription factors family.[1]

References

  1. The retinoblastoma binding factor 1 (RBF-1) site in RB gene promoter binds preferentially E4TF1, a member of the Ets transcription factors family. Savoysky, E., Mizuno, T., Sowa, Y., Watanabe, H., Sawada, J., Nomura, H., Ohsugi, Y., Handa, H., Sakai, T. Oncogene (1994) [Pubmed]
 
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