Negative regulation of the growth-promoting transcription factor E2F-1 by a stably bound cyclin A-dependent protein kinase - PubMed (original) (raw)

Negative regulation of the growth-promoting transcription factor E2F-1 by a stably bound cyclin A-dependent protein kinase

W Krek et al. Cell. 1994.

Abstract

Cyclin A-kinase, an enzyme required for coordinating S phase progression, forms stable in vivo complexes with E2F-1, a growth-promoting transcription factor, which binds to the retinoblastoma gene product and is involved in the timely activation of genes whose products contribute to G1 exit and S phase traversal. Complex formation results in a negative biochemical effect of cyclin A-kinase: the shut-off of E2F-1-dependent DNA binding function in S/G2. Thus, specific and timely cell cycle-dependent interactions of E2F-1 with proteins that inhibit its function (i.e., RB during G1 and cyclin A-kinase during S/G2) may contribute to the periodicity of expression of certain E2F-1-responsive genes at the G1/S transition.

PubMed Disclaimer

Publication types

MeSH terms

Substances

LinkOut - more resources