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MafG Sumoylation Is Required for Active Transcriptional Repression
Author(s) -
Hozumi Motohashi,
Fumiki Katsuoka,
Chika Miyoshi,
Yasuhiro Uchimura,
Hisato Saitoh,
Claire Francastel,
James Douglas Engel,
Masayuki Yamamoto
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.02193-05
Subject(s) - sumo protein , repressor , psychological repression , biology , transcription (linguistics) , histone deacetylase , microbiology and biotechnology , activator (genetics) , histone , transcription factor , biochemistry , dna , gene expression , gene , linguistics , philosophy , ubiquitin
A straightforward mechanism for eliciting transcriptional repression would be to simply block the DNA binding site for activators. Such passive repression is often mediated by transcription factors that lack an intrinsic repressor activity. MafG is a bidirectional regulator of transcription, a repressor in its homodimeric state but an activator when heterodimerized with p45. Here, we report that MafG is conjugated to SUMO-2/3 in vivo. To clarify the possible physiological role(s) for sumoylation in regulating MafG activity, we evaluated mutant and wild-type MafG in transgenic mice and cultured cells. Whereas sumoylation-deficient MafG activated p45-dependent transcription normally and did not affect heterodimer activity, repression by the sumoylation-deficient MafG mutant was severely compromised in vivo. Furthermore, the SUMO-dependent repression activity of MafG was sensitive to histone deacetylase inhibition. Thus, repression by MafG is not achieved through simple passive repression by competing for the activator binding site but requires sumoylation, which then mediates transcriptional repression through recruitment of a repressor complex containing histone deacetylase activity.

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