| Literature DB >> 8567657 |
M Olive1, S C Williams, C Dezan, P F Johnson, C Vinson.
Abstract
We have developed a bZIP protein, GBF-F, with both dominant-negative (DN) and gain-of-function properties. GBF-F is a chimera consisting of two components: the DNA binding (basic) region from the plant bZIP protein GBF-1 (GBF) and a leucine zipper (F) designed to preferentially heterodimerize with the C/EBP alpha leucine zipper. Biochemical studies show that GBF-F preferentially forms heterodimers with C/EBP alpha and thus binds a chimeric DNA sequence composed of the half-sites recognized by the C/EBP and GBF basic regions. Transient transfections in HepG2 hepatoma cells show that both components of GBF-F are necessary for inhibition of C/EBP alpha transactivation. When the C/EBP alpha leucine zipper is replaced with that of either GCN4 or VBP, the resulting protein can transactivate a C/EBP cis-element but is not inhibited by GBF-F, indicating that the specificity of dominant-negative action is determined by the leucine zipper. All known members of the C/EBP family contain similar leucine zipper regions and are inhibited by GBF-F. GBF-F also exhibits gain-of-function properties, since, with the essential cooperation of a C/EBP family member, it can transactivate a promoter containing the chimeric C/EBP/GBF site. This protein therefore has potential utility both as a dominant-negative inhibitor of C/EBP function and as an activator protein with novel DNA sequence specificity.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8567657 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.271.4.2040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157