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    Date Issued1999 (1)1996 (1)AuthorGiordano, Antonio (2)Neufeld, Ellis J. (2)Stein, Gary S. (2)Stein, Janet L. (2)
    van Gurp, Maria F. (2)
    View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Cell Biology (1)Department of Cell Biology and Cancer Center (1)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)Keyword*Promoter Regions (Genetics) (1)*Transcription, Genetic (1)Animals (1)Base Sequence (1)Base Sequence; Binding Sites; *Carrier Proteins; *Cell Cycle; *Cell Cycle Proteins; Cell Nucleus; Consensus Sequence; DNA Footprinting; DNA Replication; DNA-Binding Proteins; E2F Transcription Factors; G1 Phase; Hela Cells; Histones; Homeodomain Proteins; Humans; Molecular Sequence Data; Mutagenesis, Site-Directed; Nuclear Proteins; *Promoter Regions (Genetics); Recombinant Fusion Proteins; Repressor Proteins; Restriction Mapping; S Phase; Transcription Factor DP1; Transcription Factors (1)View MoreJournalCancer research (1)Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (1)

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    The CCAAT displacement protein/cut homeodomain protein represses osteocalcin gene transcription and forms complexes with the retinoblastoma protein-related protein p107 and cyclin A

    van Gurp, Maria F.; Pratap, Jitesh; Luong, Mai X.; Javed, Amjad; Hoffmann, Heidi M.; Giordano, Antonio; Stein, Janet L.; Neufeld, Ellis J.; Lian, Jane B.; Stein, Gary S.; et al. (1999-12-22)
    Developmental control of bone tissue-specific genes requires positive and negative regulatory factors to accommodate physiological requirements for the expression or suppression of the encoded proteins. Osteocalcin (OC) gene transcription is restricted to the late stages of osteoblast differentiation. OC gene expression is suppressed in nonosseous cells and osteoprogenitor cells and during the early proliferative stages of bone cell differentiation. The rat OC promoter contains a homeodomain recognition motif within a highly conserved multipartite promoter element (OC box I) that contributes to tissue-specific transcription. In this study, we demonstrate that the CCAAT displacement protein (CDP), a transcription factor related to the cut homeodomain protein in Drosophila melanogaster, may regulate bone-specific gene transcription in immature proliferating osteoblasts. Using gel shift competition assays and DNase I footprinting, we show that CDP/cut recognizes two promoter elements (TATA and OC box I) of the bone-related rat OC gene. Overexpression of CDP/cut in ROS 17/2.8 osteosarcoma cells results in repression of OC promoter activity; this repression is abrogated by mutating OC box I. Gel shift immunoassays show that CDP/cut forms a proliferation-specific protein/DNA complex in conjunction with cyclin A and p107, a member of the retinoblastoma protein family of tumor suppressors. Our findings suggest that CDP/cut may represent an important component of a cell signaling mechanism that provides cross-talk between developmental and cell cycle-related transcriptional regulators to suppress bone tissue-specific genes during proliferative stages of osteoblast differentiation.
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    CDP/cut is the DNA-binding subunit of histone gene transcription factor HiNF-D: a mechanism for gene regulation at the G1/S phase cell cycle transition point independent of transcription factor E2F

    Van Wijnen, Andre J.; van Gurp, Maria F.; De Ridder, Marleen C.; Tufarelli, Cristina; Last, Thomas J.; Birnbaum, Mark J.; Vaughan, Patricia S.; Giordano, Antonio; Wilhelm, Krek; Neufeld, Ellis J.; et al. (1996-10-15)
    Transcription of the genes for the human histone proteins H4, H3, H2A, H2B, and H1 is activated at the G1/S phase transition of the cell cycle. We have previously shown that the promoter complex HiNF-D, which interacts with cell cycle control elements in multiple histone genes, contains the key cell cycle factors cyclin A, CDC2, and a retinoblastoma (pRB) protein-related protein. However, an intrinsic DNA-binding subunit for HiNF-D was not identified. Many genes that are up-regulated at the G1/S phase boundary are controlled by E2F, a transcription factor that associates with cyclin-, cyclin-dependent kinase-, and pRB-related proteins. Using gel-shift immunoassays, DNase I protection, and oligonucleotide competition analyses, we show that the homeodomain protein CDP/cut, not E2F, is the DNA-binding subunit of the HiNF-D complex. The HiNF-D (CDP/cut) complex with the H4 promoter is immunoreactive with antibodies against CDP/cut and pRB but not p107, whereas the CDP/cut complex with a nonhistone promoter (gp91-phox) reacts only with CDP and p107 antibodies. Thus, CDP/cut complexes at different gene promoters can associate with distinct pRB-related proteins. Transient coexpression assays show that CDP/cut modulates H4 promoter activity via the HiNF-D-binding site. Hence, DNA replication-dependent histone H4 genes are regulated by an E2F-independent mechanism involving a complex of CDP/cut with cyclin A/CDC2/ RB-related proteins.
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