Mos activates myogenic differentiation by promoting heterodimerization of MyoD and E12 proteins - PubMed (original) (raw)
Mos activates myogenic differentiation by promoting heterodimerization of MyoD and E12 proteins
J L Lenormand et al. Mol Cell Biol. 1997 Feb.
Abstract
The activities of myogenic basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) factors are regulated by a number of different positive and negative signals. Extensive information has been published about the molecular mechanisms that interfere with the process of myogenic differentiation, but little is known about the positive signals. We previously showed that overexpression of rat Mos in C2C12 myoblasts increased the expression of myogenic markers whereas repression of Mos products by antisense RNAs inhibited myogenic differentiation. In the present work, our results show that the rat mos proto-oncogene activates transcriptional activity of MyoD protein. In transient transfection assays, Mos promotes transcriptional transactivation by MyoD of the muscle creatine kinase enhancer and/or a reporter gene linked to MyoD-DNA binding sites. Physical interaction between Mos and MyoD, but not with E12, is demonstrated in vivo by using the two-hybrid approach with C3H10T1/2 cells and in vitro by using the glutathione S-transferase (GST) pull-down assays. Unphosphorylated MyoD from myogenic cell lysates and/or bacterially expressed MyoD physically interacts with Mos. This interaction occurs via the helix 2 region of MyoD and a highly conserved region in Mos proteins with 40% similarity to the helix 2 domain of the E-protein class of bHLH factors. Phosphorylation of MyoD by activated GST-Mos protein inhibits the DNA-binding activity of MyoD homodimers and promotes MyoD-E12 heterodimer formation. These data support a novel function for Mos as a mediator (coregulator) of muscle-specific gene(s) expression.
References
- Oncogene. 1990 Aug;5(8):1149-57 -PubMed
- Cell. 1993 Dec 31;75(7):1351-9 -PubMed
- Mol Cell Biol. 1991 Feb;11(2):604-10 -PubMed
- Cell. 1991 Feb 8;64(3):521-32 -PubMed
- Cell. 1991 Feb 8;64(3):573-84 -PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Research Materials