HoxA10 Represses Gene Transcription in Undifferentiated Myeloid Cells by Interaction with Histone Deacetylase 2

The homeodomain proteins, HoxA10 and Pbx1a, interact with negative cis elements to repress gene transcription in undifferentiated myeloid cells. The CYBB and NCF2 genes, which encode the gp91 PHOX and p67 PHOX proteins, are two such HoxA10-Pbx1a target genes. In previous studies, we found that HoxA1...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2003-11, Vol.278 (48), p.47792-47802
Hauptverfasser: Lu, YuFeng, Goldenberg, Inna, Bei, Ling, Andrejic, Jelena, Eklund, Elizabeth A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The homeodomain proteins, HoxA10 and Pbx1a, interact with negative cis elements to repress gene transcription in undifferentiated myeloid cells. The CYBB and NCF2 genes, which encode the gp91 PHOX and p67 PHOX proteins, are two such HoxA10-Pbx1a target genes. In previous studies, we found that HoxA10-Pbx1a represses transcription of these genes by two mechanisms: competition for DNA binding with transcriptional activators and endogenous repression activity. In these studies, we identify a novel molecular mechanism of endogenous transcriptional repression by HoxA10-Pbx1a. Endogenous repression activity of other Hox-Pbx1a complexes requires recruitment of transcriptional co-repressor proteins by Pbx1a. In contrast, our investigations have determined that HoxA10 has Pbx1a-independent endogenous repression activity. We find that this transcriptional repression activity is abrogated by histone deacetylase inhibitors, suggesting involvement of co-repressor proteins. Consistent with this, we identify HoxA10 amino acids 224–249 as a Pbx1-independent repression domain, which interacts with histone deacetylase 2. We have determined that this HoxA10 domain is not conserved with other Abd Hox proteins, although homology exists with other transcription factors and co-repressors. Understanding the roles different Hox proteins play in myeloid differentiation is a challenging problem. Our results suggest that insight into this problem can be obtained from biochemical characterization of the various molecular mechanisms of Hox protein function.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M305885200