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A Novel Interaction between TFII-I and Mdm2 with a Negative Effect on TFII-I Transcriptional Activity
Author(s) -
Kateřina Cetkovská,
Hana Šustová,
Pavlína Kosztyu,
Stjepan Uldrijan
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0144753
Subject(s) - biology , mdm2 , regulator , transcription factor , promoter , transcription (linguistics) , cancer research , transcriptional regulation , oncogene , regulation of gene expression , suppressor , gene , gene expression , genetics , cell cycle , linguistics , philosophy
Williams-Beuren syndrome-associated transcription factor TFII-I plays a critical regulatory role in bone and neural tissue development and in immunity, in part by regulating cell proliferation in response to mitogens. Mdm2, a cellular oncogene responsible for the loss of p53 tumor suppressor activity in a significant proportion of human cancers, was identified in this study as a new binding partner for TFII-I and a negative regulator of TFII-I-mediated transcription. These findings suggest a new p53-independent mechanism by which increased Mdm2 levels found in human tumors could influence cancer cells. In addition to that, we present data indicating that TFII-I is an important cellular regulator of transcription from the immediate-early promoter of human cytomegalovirus, a promoter sequence frequently used in mammalian expression vectors, including vectors for gene therapy. Our observation that Mdm2 over-expression can decrease the ability of TFII-I to activate the CMV promoter might have implications for the efficiency of experimental gene therapy based on CMV promoter–derived vectors in cancers with Mdm2 gene amplification.

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