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Phosphorylation within the MafA N terminus regulates C-terminal dimerization and DNA binding.

Author
Abstract
:

Phosphorylation regulates transcription factor activity by influencing dimerization, cellular localization, activation potential, and/or DNA binding. Nevertheless, precisely how this post-translation modification mediates these processes is poorly understood. Here, we examined the role of phosphorylation on the DNA-binding properties of MafA and MafB, closely related transcriptional activators of the basic-leucine zipper (b-Zip) family associated with cell differentiation and oncogenesis. Many common phosphorylation sites were identified by mass spectrometry. However, dephosphorylation only precluded the detection of MafA dimers and consequently dramatically reduced DNA-binding ability. Analysis of MafA/B chimeras revealed that sensitivity to the phosphorylation status of MafA was imparted by sequences spanning the C-terminal dimerization region (amino acids (aa) 279-359), whereas the homologous MafB region (aa 257-323) conveyed phosphorylation-independent DNA binding. Mutational analysis showed that formation of MafA dimers capable of DNA binding required phosphorylation within the distinct N-terminal transactivation domain (aa 1-72) and not the C-terminal b-Zip region. These results demonstrate a novel relationship between the phosphoamino acid-rich transactivation and b-Zip domains in controlling MafA DNA-binding activity.

Year of Publication
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2010
Journal
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The Journal of biological chemistry
Volume
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285
Issue
:
17
Number of Pages
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12655-61
Date Published
:
2010
ISSN Number
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0021-9258
URL
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http://www.jbc.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=20208071
DOI
:
10.1074/jbc.M110.105759
Short Title
:
J Biol Chem
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