Title of article :
DNA Binding Domains and Nuclear Localization Signal of LEDGF: Contribution of two Helix-Turn-Helix (HTH)-like Domains and a Stretch of 58 Amino Acids of the N-terminal to the Trans-activation Potential of LEDGF
Author/Authors :
Dhirendra P. Singh، نويسنده , , E. Kubo، نويسنده , , Y. Takamura، نويسنده , , T. Shinohara، نويسنده , , A. Kumar، نويسنده , , Leo T. Chylack Jr، نويسنده , , N. Fatma، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Lens epithelium derived growth factor (LEDGF), a nuclear protein, plays a role in regulating the transcription of stress-associated genes such as heat shock proteins by binding to consensus core DNA sequences nAGGn or nGAAn or their repeats, and in doing so helps to provide cyto-protection. However, additional information is required to identify the specific structural features of LEDGF involved in gene transcription. Here we have investigated the functional domains activating and repressing DNA-binding modules, by using a DNA binding assay and trans-activation experiments performed by analyzing proteins prepared from deletion constructs. The results disclosed the DNA-binding domain of N-terminal LEDGF mapped between amino acid residues 5 and 62, a 58 amino acid residue stretch PWWP domain which binds to stress response elements (STRE; A/TGGGGA/T). C-terminal LEDGF contains activation domains, an extensive loop-region (aa 418–530) with two helix-turn-helix (HTH)-like domains, and binds to a heat shock element (HSE; nGAAn). A trans-activation assay using Hsp27 promoter revealed that both HTH domains contribute in a cooperative manner to the trans-activation potential of LEDGF. Interestingly, removal of N-terminal LEDGF (aa 1–187) significantly enhances the gene activation potential of C-terminal LEDGF (aa 199–530); thus the N-terminal domain (aa 5–62), exhibits auto-transcriptional repression activity. It appears that this domain is involved in stabilizing the LEDGF–DNA binding complex. Collectively, our results demonstrate that LEDGF contains three DNA-binding domains, which regulate gene expression depending on cellular microenvironment and thus modify the physiology of cells to maintain cellular homeostasis.
Keywords :
stress and heat shock elements , PWWP domain , lens epithelium-derived growth factor , DNA-binding domain , transcription–regulation
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology