Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, Tufts University School of Medicine
2. Department of Cancer Biology, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Polyomavirus large T antigen (LT) has a direct role in viral replication and a profound effect on cell phenotype. It promotes cell cycle progression, immortalizes primary cells, blocks differentiation, and causes apoptosis. While much of large T function is related to its effects on tumor suppressors of the retinoblastoma susceptibility (Rb) gene family, we have previously shown that activation of the cyclin A promoter can occur through a non-Rb-dependent mechanism. Here we show that activation occurs via an ATF/CREB site. Investigation of the mechanism indicates that large T can synergize with CREB family members to activate transcription. Experiments with Gal4-CREB constructs show that synergy is independent of CREB phosphorylation by protein kinase A. Examination of synergy with Gal4-CREB deletion constructs indicates that large T acts on the constitutive activation domain of CREB. Large T can bind to CREB in vivo. Genetic analysis shows that the DNA-binding domain (residues 264 to 420) is sufficient to activate transcription when it is localized to the nucleus. Further analysis of the DNA-binding domain shows that while site-specific DNA binding is not required, non-site-specific DNA binding is important for the activation. Thus, CREB binding and DNA binding are both important for large T activation of CREB/ATF sites. In contrast to previous models where large T transactivation occurred indirectly, these results also suggest that large T can act directly at promoters to activate transcription.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
9 articles.
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