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Molecular cloning of human CREB-2: an ATF/CREB transcription factor that can negatively regulate transcription from the cAMP response element.
Author(s) -
Beverly A. Karpinski,
Gerald D. Morle,
Jodi I. Huggenvik,
Michael D. Uhler,
J M Leiden
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.89.11.4820
Subject(s) - creb , leucine zipper , transcription factor , creb1 , activating transcription factor , atf3 , repressor , activating transcription factor 2 , response element , biology , transcription (linguistics) , microbiology and biotechnology , basic helix loop helix leucine zipper transcription factors , bzip domain , general transcription factor , complementary dna , taf2 , dna binding protein , genetics , gene , gene expression , promoter , enhancer , linguistics , philosophy
The cAMP response element (CRE) is an octanucleotide motif (TGACGTCA) that mediates diverse transcriptional regulatory effects. In this report we describe the isolation and characterization of a full-length cDNA that encodes a CRE binding protein called CREB-2. Like other ATF/CREB transcription factors, the 351-amino acid CREB-2 protein contains a COOH-terminal leucine-zipper motif and an adjacent basic domain. CREB-2 mRNA is expressed ubiquitously in human tumor cell lines and mouse organs suggesting that it is involved in regulating transcription in a wide variety of cell types. Overexpression of CREB-2 resulted in a consistent and significant repression of CRE-dependent transcription in CV-1 cells. Deletional analyses localized the transcriptional repressor activity of CREB-2 to a 102-amino acid COOH-terminal region (amino acids 249-351) that contains the leucine-zipper and basic domains of the molecule. These results demonstrate that CRE-dependent transcription can be both positively and negatively regulated by structurally related members of the ATF/CREB family.

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