Two distinct nuclear receptor-interaction domains and CREB-binding protein-dependent transactivation function of activating signal cointegrator-2

SK Lee, SY Jung, YS Kim, SY Na… - Molecular …, 2001 - academic.oup.com
SK Lee, SY Jung, YS Kim, SY Na, YC Lee, JW Lee
Molecular Endocrinology, 2001academic.oup.com
ASC-2 is a recently isolated transcriptional cointegrator molecule, which is amplified in
human cancers and stimulates transactivation by nuclear receptors, AP-1, nuclear factorκ B
(NFκB), serum response factor (SRF), and numerous other transcription factors. ASC-2
contained two nuclear receptor-interaction domains, both of which are dependent on the
integrity of their core LXXLL sequences. Surprisingly, the C-terminal LXXLL motif specifically
interacted with oxysterol receptor LXRβ, whereas the N-terminal motif bound a broad range …
Abstract
ASC-2 is a recently isolated transcriptional cointegrator molecule, which is amplified in human cancers and stimulates transactivation by nuclear receptors, AP-1, nuclear factorκ B (NFκB), serum response factor (SRF), and numerous other transcription factors. ASC-2 contained two nuclear receptor-interaction domains, both of which are dependent on the integrity of their core LXXLL sequences. Surprisingly, the C-terminal LXXLL motif specifically interacted with oxysterol receptor LXRβ, whereas the N-terminal motif bound a broad range of nuclear receptors. These interactions appeared to be essential because a specific subregion of ASC-2 including the N- or C-terminal LXXLL motif acted as a potent dominant negative mutant with transactivation by appropriate nuclear receptors. In addition, the autonomous transactivation domain (AD) of ASC-2 was found to consist of three separable subregions; i.e. AD1, AD2, and AD3. In particular, AD2 and AD3 were binding sites for CREB binding protein (CBP), and CBP-neutralizing E1A repressed the autonomous transactivation function of ASC-2. Furthermore, the receptor transactivation was not enhanced by ASC-2 in the presence of E1A and significantly impaired by overexpressed AD2. From these results, we concluded that ASC-2 directly binds to nuclear receptors and recruits CBP to mediate the nuclear receptor transactivation in vivo.
Oxford University Press