Involvement of the N-finger in the self-association of GATA-1
Data(s) |
01/01/1998
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Resumo |
Zinc fingers are recognized as small protein domains that bind to specific DNA sequences. Recently however, zinc fingers from a number of proteins, in particular the GATA family of transcription factors, have also been implicated in specific protein-protein interactions. The erythroid protein GATA-1 contains two zinc fingers: the C-finger, which is sufficient for sequence-specific DNA-binding, and the N-finger, which appears both to modulate DNA-binding and to interact with other transcription factors. We have expressed and purified the N-finger domain and investigated its involvement in the self-association of GATA-1. We demonstrate that this domain does not homodimerize but instead makes intermolecular contacts with the C-finger, suggesting that GATA dimers are maintained by reciprocal N-finger-C-finger contacts. Deletion analysis identifies a 25-residue region, C-terminal to the core N-finger domain, that is sufficient for interaction with intact GATA-1. A similar subdomain exists C-terminal to the C-finger, and we show that self-association is substantially reduced when both subdomains are disrupted by mutation. Moreover, mutations that impair GATA-1 self-association also interfere with its ability to activate transcription in transfection studies. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology |
Palavras-Chave | #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Transcription Factor Gata-1 #Dna-binding Domain #Zinc-finger #Developmental Regulation #Protein #Gene #Hematopoiesis #Activation #Sp1 #Drosophila |
Tipo |
Journal Article |