Modular organization of Pax/homeodomain
proteins in transcriptional regulation
Sheng G, Harris E, Bertuccioli C and Desplan C
Biol Chem 378(8):863-72 (1997)
SUMMARY
Specificity in transcriptional regulation lies in a large part in the specificity
of DNA binding by transcription factors. One group of transcription factors
which are of great interest for studying transcriptional specificity is
the Pax/Homeodomain (Pax/HD) proteins which contain two conserved DNA
binding domains, a paired domain (PD) and a Paired-class homeodomain (HD).
The Pax/HD proteins can bind to at least three types of specific DNA sequences:
the PD binding sites, the dimeric HD binding sites and a composite HD
and PD binding site. We propose that Pax/HD proteins regulate different
subsets of their target genes through modular binding to one of these
three specific sequences. We show that, in a tissue culture system, a
member of the Pax/HD family, Paired, is able to activate transcription
after binding through either its PD or its HD. The transactivation mediated
by one domain does not require DNA binding of the other domain. Furthermore,
binding sites specific for the PD of Paired are sufficient to mediate
embryonic expression of a reporter gene in a paired-like pattern. The
expression of the reporter gene is dependent on wild type paired function
and, in a prd mutant background, it can be rescued by an exogenous paired
gene encoding a protein whose HD is not able to bind to DNA. Finally,
we show that the Paired protein uses differently its C-terminal activation
domain when transactivation is mediated through its PD or its HD. These
results and recent evidence from other Pax/HD proteins strongly suggest
that this class of proteins is able to achieve specific and modular transcriptional
regulation through its multiple DNA binding domains.
LINK
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