Publication | Open Access
HCFC1 is a common component of active human CpG-island promoters and coincides with ZNF143, THAP11, YY1, and GABP transcription factor occupancy
121
Citations
39
References
2013
Year
Molecular RegulationGeneticsMolecular BiologyDna SequencesGene Regulatory NetworkTranscriptional RegulationVirus GeneCell SignalingMolecular SignalingHuman Transcriptional RegulationGene ExpressionEpigenetic RegulationCell BiologyTranscription RegulationChromatin FunctionCommon ComponentChromatinChromatin StructureHcfc1-binding SitesNatural SciencesGene RegulationTranscription FactorsMedicineCell Development
In human transcriptional regulation, DNA-sequence-specific factors can associate with intermediaries that orchestrate interactions with a diverse set of chromatin-modifying enzymes. One such intermediary is HCFC1 (also known as HCF-1). HCFC1, first identified in herpes simplex virus transcription, has a poorly defined role in cellular transcriptional regulation. We show here that, in HeLa cells, HCFC1 is observed bound to 5400 generally active CpG-island promoters. Examination of the DNA sequences underlying the HCFC1-binding sites revealed three sequence motifs associated with the binding of (1) ZNF143 and THAP11 (also known as Ronin), (2) GABP, and (3) YY1 sequence-specific transcription factors. Subsequent analysis revealed colocalization of HCFC1 with these four transcription factors at ∼90% of the 5400 HCFC1-bound promoters. These studies suggest that a relatively small number of transcription factors play a major role in HeLa-cell transcriptional regulation in association with HCFC1.
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