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

Differential regulation of c-Myb-induced transcription activation by a phosphorylation site in the negative regulatory domain.

The c-myb protooncogene encodes a highly conserved 75-89-kDa transcription factor that contains three functional domains, an amino-terminal DNA binding domain (DBD), a central acidic transactivation domain, and a carboxyl-terminal negative regulatory domain (NRD). Two acute transforming retroviruses, avian myeloblastosis virus and the E26 leukemia virus, transduced portions of c-myb and encode Myb proteins that are truncated in both the DBD and the NRD. Several conserved potential sites for phosphorylation by proline-directed serine/threonine protein kinases reside in or near the NRD, suggesting that phosphorylation might play a role in regulating c-Myb. We have previously demonstrated that serine 528, located in the NRD, is a target for p42(mapk) in vitro. Serine 528 is phosphorylated in vivo in several cell lines, and substitution of serine 528 to alanine (S528A) resulted in an increased ability of Myb to transactivate a synthetic promoter containing five copies of the mim-1A Myb-responsive element and a minimal herpes tk promoter. We have tested the ability of S528A Myb to transactivate a series of cellular target promoters and report that the serine to alanine substitution increased the ability of Myb to activate transcription from the CD34 promoter but not the c-myc or mim-1 promoters. This suggests that phosphorylation of serine 528 may differentially regulate c-Myb activity at different promoters. The DNA binding and multimerization activities of c-Myb appear to be unaffected by the S528A substitution, suggesting that phosphorylation of serine 528 may mediate its effect on the transcription transactivating activity of c-Myb by regulating interactions with other proteins.[1]

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