1. Academic Validation
  2. Zhangfei is a potent and specific inhibitor of the host cell factor-binding transcription factor Luman

Zhangfei is a potent and specific inhibitor of the host cell factor-binding transcription factor Luman

  • J Biol Chem. 2005 Apr 15;280(15):15257-66. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M500728200.
Vikram Misra 1 Noreen Rapin Oksana Akhova Matthew Bainbridge Paul Korchinski
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Microbiology, Western College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada. vikram.misra@usask.ca
Abstract

Host cell factor (HCF) was initially discovered as a cellular co-factor required for the activation of herpes simplex virus immediate early gene expression by the virion associated transactivator VP16. HCF also participates in a variety of cellular processes, although the mechanism of its action is not known. VP16 binds to HCF through a 4-amino acid motif (EHAY), which closely resembles the HCF binding domain of two cellular basic leucine-zipper proteins, Luman and Zhangfei. Luman is a powerful transcription factor that, in transient expression assays, activates promoters containing cAMP or unfolded protein response elements (UPRE). In contrast, Zhangfei neither binds consensus recognition elements for basic leucine-zipper proteins nor does it activate promoters containing them. Here we show that Zhangfei suppresses the ability of Luman to activate transcription. HCF appeared to be required for efficient suppression. A mutant of Zhangfei, which was unable to bind HCF, was impaired in its ability to suppress Luman. Zhangfei did not suppress ATF6, a transcription factor closely related to Luman but that does not bind HCF, unless the HCF binding motif of Luman was grafted onto it. Zhangfei inhibited the HCF-dependent activation of a UPRE-containing promoter by a Gal4-Luman fusion protein but was unable to inhibit the HCF-independent activation by Gal4-Luman of a promoter that contained Gal4 binding motifs. Binding of HCF by Zhangfei was required for the co-localization of Luman and Zhangfei to nuclear domains, suggesting that HCF might target the proteins to a common location.

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