Publication | Open Access
Alternative splicing of fosB transcripts results in differentially expressed mRNAs encoding functionally antagonistic proteins.
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Citations
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References
1991
Year
GeneticsRna SplicingMolecular BiologyFosb Transcripts ResultsSplicing VariantTranscriptional RegulationProtein ExpressionSignaling PathwayAntagonistic ProteinsFosb MrnaLong Fosb FormAlternative SplicingCell SignalingRna ProcessingFos FamilyGene ExpressionCell BiologyTranscription RegulationSignal TransductionDevelopmental BiologyNatural SciencesGene RegulationCellular BiochemistryMedicine
We show that serum-stimulated fibroblasts transiently express two different forms of fosB mRNA, which are generated by alternative splicing of the transcript from a single gene. In addition to the known long form (fosB-L), encoding a protein of 338 amino acids (FosB-L), a second shorter form (fosB-S) with a deletion of 140 bp was detected. This deletion creates a stop codon 3' to the leucine repeat, giving rise to a protein of 237 amino acids (FosB-S) lacking the carboxyl terminus of FosB-L. Only the long FosB form efficiently induces transformation in mouse and rat fibroblast cell lines and trans-represses the c-fos promoter. Both of these functions are suppressed by coexpressed FosB-S. Upon serum stimulation, maximum expression of the oncogenic fosB-L form precedes the expression of the antagonistic fosB-S form, indicating a new mechanisms regulating the action of members of the Fos family. However, FosB-L and FosB-S do not differ in all trans-regulatory properties: Trans-activation of a 5x TRE-CAT reporter construct in HeLa and NIH-3T3 cells was found with both FosB forms. These observations suggest a correlation between fosB-induced transformation and trans-repression, thus pointing to different mechanisms involved in transformation by fosB and c-fos/v-fos.
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