Publication | Open Access
Oct-1 [corrected] and Oct-2 DNA-binding site specificity is regulated in vitro by different kinases
30
Citations
39
References
1996
Year
Molecular RegulationMolecular BiologyTranscription Factors Oct-1Transcriptional RegulationProtein Kinase ACell RegulationVirus GeneCell SignalingViral GeneticsOctamer Binding SiteDna ReplicationDifferent KinasesNuclear OrganizationGene ExpressionCell BiologyTranscription RegulationChromatinSignal TransductionNatural SciencesMolecular BasisMedicine
The transcription factors Oct-1 and Oct-2 bind differentially to three octamer binding sequences corresponding to the octamer binding site from the H2B promoter [ATGCTAATAA], a simple TAATGARAT motif, found in herpes simplex virus IE4/5 genes [GCGGTAATGAGAT], and a perfect consensus overlapping octamer/TAATGARAT motif [ATGCTAATGAGAT]. By comparing the effects of protein kinase A, protein kinase C and casein kinase 2 in vitro on the binding of Oct-1 and Oct-2 to the three motifs, we show that the actions of these kinases regulate Oct-1 and Oct-2 DNA binding independently of each other in a binding-site-specific manner. Inhibition of cellular phosphatases also regulate Oct-1 and Oct-2 DNA binding in a binding-site-specific manner. Both kinase and phosphatase activity are important for regulating the DNA binding activity of Oct-1 and Oct-2 because, in the presence of phosphatase inhibitors, protein kinase A attenuates the binding of both Oct-1 and Oct-2 to the octamer binding site but enhances binding when phosphatase inhibitors are omitted. Thus the DNA specificity of Oct-1 and Oct-2 can be regulated in vitro by the action of different kinases.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
1989 | 4.2K | |
1992 | 1.6K | |
1986 | 1.2K | |
1989 | 829 | |
1990 | 669 | |
1987 | 514 | |
1994 | 506 | |
1988 | 428 | |
1988 | 384 | |
1988 | 368 |
Page 1
Page 1