Title of article
Drosophila Atrophin Homolog Functions as a Transcriptional Corepressor in Multiple Developmental Processes
Author/Authors
Sheng Zhang، نويسنده , , Lei Xu، نويسنده , , Janet Lee، نويسنده , , Tian Xu، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages
12
From page
45
To page
56
Abstract
Dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy is a progressive neurodegenerative disease caused by the expansion of a polyglutamine repeats within the Atrophin-1 protein. The in vivo function of Atrophin-1 is unknown. We have characterized a Drosophila gene encoding an Atrophin family protein. Analysis of mutant phenotypes indicates that Drosophila Atrophin is required in diverse developmental processes including early embryonic patterning. Drosophila Atrophin genetically interacts with the transcription repressor even-skipped and is required for its repressive function in vivo. Drosophila Atrophin directly binds to Even-skipped in vitro. Furthermore, both human Atrophin-1 and Drosophila Atrophin repress transcription in vivo when tethered to DNA, and poly-Q expansion in Atrophin-1 reduces this repressive activity. We propose that Atrophin proteins function as versatile transcriptional corepressors and discuss a model that deregulation of transcription may contribute to the pathogenesis of neurodegeneration.
Journal title
CELL
Serial Year
2002
Journal title
CELL
Record number
1017635
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