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Meis Proteins Are Major in Vivo Dna Binding Partners For Wild-Type But Not Chimeric Pbx Proteins

  1. Author:
    Chang, C. P.
    Jacobs, Y.
    Nakamura, T.
    Jenkins, N. A.
    Copeland, N. G.
    Cleary, M. L.
  2. Author Address

    Cleary ML STANFORD UNIV MED CTR DEPT PATHOL STANFORD, CA 94305 USA STANFORD UNIV MED CTR DEPT PATHOL STANFORD, CA 94305 USA NCI FREDERICK CANC RES & DEV CTR ABL BASIC RES PROGRAM MAMMALIAN GENET LAB FREDERICK, MD 21702 USA
    1. Year: 1997
  1. Journal: Molecular and Cellular Biology
    1. 17
    2. 10
    3. Pages: 5679-5687
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    The Pbx1 and Meis1 proto-oncogenes code for divergent homeodomain proteins that are targets for oncogenic mutations in human and murine leukemias, respectively, and implicated by genetic analyses to functionally collaborate with Hox proteins during embryonic development and/or oncogenesis. Although Pbx proteins have been shown to dimerize with Hox proteins and modulate their DNA binding properties in vitro, the biochemical compositions of endogenous Pbx-containing complexes have not been determined. In the present study, we demonstrate that Pbx and Meis proteins form abundant complexes that comprise a major Pbx-containing DNA binding activity in nuclear extracts of cultured cells and mouse embryos. Pbx1 and Meis1 dimerize in solution and cooperatively bind bipartite DNA sequences consisting of directly adjacent Pbx and Meis half sites. Pbx1-Meis1 heterodimers display distinctive DNA binding specificities and cross-bind to a subset of Pbx-Hox sites, including those previously implicated as response elements for the execution of Pbx-dependent Hox programs in vivo. Chimeric oncoprotein E2a-Pbx1 is unable to bind DNA with Meis1, due to the deletion of amino-terminal Pbx1 sequences following fusion with E2a. We conclude that Meis proteins are preferred in vivo DNA binding partners for wild-type Pbx1, a relationship that is circumvented by its oncogenic counterpart E2a-Pbx1. [References: 53]

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