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5 June 1997, Volume 14, Number 22, Pages 2721-2728
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Article
The HMG-box transcription factor HBP1 is targeted by the pocket proteins and E1A
Paul Lavender, Laurence Vandel, Andrew J Bannister and Tony Kouzaridesa

Wellcome/CRC Institute and Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge, Tennis Court Road, Cambridge, UK

aAuthor for correspondence

Abstract

A yeast two-hybrid screen has identified HBP1 as a transcription factor capable of interacting with the pocket protein family. We show that HBP1 can interact with one of these, RB, both in vitro and in mammalian cells. Two distinct RB binding sites are present within HBP1 - a high affinity binding site, mediated by an LXCXE motif and a separate low affinity binding site present within an activation domain. GAL4-fusion experiments indicate that HBP1 contains a masked activation domain. Deletion of two independent N- and C-terminal inhibitor domains unmasks an activation domain which is 100-fold more active than the full length protein. The released activation capacity is repressed by RB, p130 and p107. In addition, E1A can repress the activity of HBP1 via conserved region 1 sequences in a manner independent of the CBP co-activator. We show by stable expression in NIH3T3 cells that HBP1 has the capacity to induce morphological transformation of cells in culture.

Keywords

HMG-box; retinoblastoma; E1A

Received 6 February 1999; revised 0; accepted 1 May 1999
5 June 1997, Volume 14, Number 22, Pages 2721-2728
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