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The MyoD-inducible p204 protein overcomes the inhibition of myoblast differentiation by Id proteins
Liu, Chuan-ju; Ding, Bo; Wang, Hong; Lengyel, Peter
The murine p204 protein level is highest in heart and skeletal muscle. During the fusion of cultured myoblasts to myotubes, the p204 level increases due to transcription dependent on the muscle-specific MyoD protein, and p204 is phosphorylated and translocated from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. p204 overexpression accelerates myoblast fusion in differentiation medium and triggers this process even in growth medium. Here we report that p204 is required for the differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts. We propose that it enables the differentiation, at least in part, by overcoming the inhibition of the activities of the MyoD and E47 proteins by the Id proteins: Id1, Id2, and Id3. These are known to inhibit skeletal muscle differentiation by binding and blocking the activity of MyoD, E12/E47, and other myogenic basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) proteins. Our hypothesis is based on the following findings. (i) A decrease in the p204 level in C2C12 myoblasts by antisense RNA (a) increased the level of the Id2; (b) inhibited the MyoD-, E12/E47-, and other bHLH protein-dependent accumulation of the muscle-specific myosin heavy-chain protein; and (c) inhibited the fusion of myoblasts to myotubes in differentiation medium. (ii) p204 bound to the Id proteins in vitro and in vivo. (iii) In the binding of p204 to Id2, the b segment of p204 and the HLH segment of Id2 were involved. (iv) Addition of p204 overcame the inhibition by the Id proteins of the binding of MyoD and E47 to DNA in vitro. (v) Overexpression of p204 in myoblasts (a) decreased the level of the Id proteins, even in a culture in growth medium, and (b) overcame the inhibition by the Id proteins of MyoD- and E47 dependent transcription and also overcame the inhibition by Id2 of the fusion of myoblasts to myotubes
PMCID:133750
PMID: 11940648
ISSN: 0270-7306
CID: 43273
Direct interaction with contactin targets voltage-gated sodium channel Na(v)1.9/NaN to the cell membrane
Liu CJ; Dib-Hajj SD; Black JA; Greenwood J; Lian Z; Waxman SG
The mechanisms that target various sodium channels within different regions of the neuronal membrane, which they endow with different physiological properties, are not yet understood. To examine this issue we studied the voltage-gated sodium channel Na(v)1.9/NaN, which is preferentially expressed in small sensory neurons of dorsal root ganglia and trigeminal ganglia and the nonmyelinated axons that arise from them. Our results show that the cell adhesion molecule contactin binds directly to Na(v)1.9/NaN and recruits tenascin to the protein complex in vitro. Na(v)1.9/NaN and contactin co-immunoprecipitate from dorsal root ganglia and transfected Chinese hamster ovary cell line, and co-localize in the C-type neuron soma and along nonmyelinated C-fibers and at nerve endings in the skin. Co-transfection of Chinese hamster ovary cells with Na(v)1.9/NaN and contactin enhances the surface expression of the sodium channel over that of Na(v)1.9/NaN alone. Thus contactin binds directly to Na(v)1.9/NaN and participates in the surface localization of this channel along nonmyelinated axons
PMID: 11581273
ISSN: 0021-9258
CID: 43269
Fibroblast growth factor homologous factor 1B binds to the C terminus of the tetrodotoxin-resistant sodium channel rNav1.9a (NaN)
Liu Cj; Dib-Hajj SD; Waxman SG
In this study we demonstrate a direct interaction between a cytosolic fibroblast growth factor family member and a sodium channel. A yeast two-hybrid screen for proteins that associate with the cytoplasmic domains of the tetrodotoxin-resistant sodium channel rNa(v)1.9a (NaN) led to the identification of fibroblast growth factor homologous factor 1B (FHF1B), a member of the fibroblast growth factor family, as an interacting partner of rNa(v)1.9a. FHF1B selectively interacts with the C-terminal region but not the other four intracellular segments of rNa(v)1.9a. FHF1B binds directly to the C-terminal polypeptide of rNa(v)1.9a both in vitro and in mammalian cell lines. The N-terminal 5-77 amino acid residues of FHF1B are essential for binding to rNa(v)1.9a. FHF1B did not interact with C termini of two other sodium channels hNa(v)1.7a (hNaNE) and rNa(v)1.8a (SNS), which share 50% similarity to the C-terminal polypeptide of rNa(v)1.9a. FHF1B is the first growth factor found to bind specifically to a sodium channel. Although the functional significance of this interaction is not clear, FHF1B may affect the rNa(v)1.9a channel directly or by recruiting other proteins to the channel complex. Alternatively, it is possible that rNa(v)1.9a may help deliver this factor to the cell membrane, where it exerts its function
PMID: 11376006
ISSN: 0021-9258
CID: 43270
The interferon- and differentiation-inducible p202a protein inhibits the transcriptional activity of c-Myc by blocking its association with Max
Wang H; Liu C; Lu Y; Chatterjee G; Ma XY; Eisenman RN; Lengyel P
p202a is a murine protein that is induced during the fusion of myoblasts to myotubes and can also be induced by interferon. Even 2-3-fold overexpression of p202a in cells retards proliferation. p202a was shown to modulate transcription by binding, and inhibiting the activity of several transcription factors including c-Fos, c-Jun, AP-2, E2F1, E2F4, NF-kappaB, MyoD, and myogenin. Here we report that p202a also bound the c-Myc protein in vitro and in vivo; the C-terminal p202a b segment bound the C-terminal basic region helix-loop-helix-leucine zipper (bHLHLZ) region of c-Myc. The transfection of a p202a expression plasmid inhibited the c-Myc-dependent expression of reporter plasmids in transient assays; moreover, overexpression of p202a in stable cell lines decreased the endogenous levels of mRNAs whose expression is driven by c-Myc. These effects of p202a are consistent with our finding that the binding of p202a to c-Myc inhibited the binding of c-Myc to Max in vitro and in vivo. p202a also inhibited the c-Myc-induced anchorage-independent growth and apoptosis of Rat-1 cells. The inhibition of c-Myc-dependent transcription, proliferation, and apoptosis by p202a is in line with the involvement of p202a in differentiation
PMID: 10835425
ISSN: 0021-9258
CID: 43278
MyoD-dependent induction during myoblast differentiation of p204, a protein also inducible by interferon
Liu C; Wang H; Zhao Z; Yu S; Lu YB; Meyer J; Chatterjee G; Deschamps S; Roe BA; Lengyel P
p204, an interferon-inducible p200 family protein, inhibits rRNA synthesis in fibroblasts by blocking the binding of the upstream binding factor transcription factor to DNA. Here we report that among 10 adult mouse tissues tested, the level of p204 was highest in heart and skeletal muscles. In cultured C2C12 skeletal muscle myoblasts, p204 was nucleoplasmic and its level was low. During myoblast fusion this level strongly increased, p204 became phosphorylated, and the bulk of p204 appeared in the cytoplasm of the myotubes. Leptomycin B, an inhibitor of nuclear export that blocked myoblast fusion, inhibited the nuclear export signal-dependent translocation of p204 to the cytoplasm. The increase in the p204 level during myoblast fusion was a consequence of MyoD transcription factor binding to several MyoD-specific sequences in the gene encoding p204, followed by transcription. Overexpression of p204 (in C2C12 myoblasts carrying an inducible p204 expression plasmid) accelerated the fusion of myoblasts to myotubes in differentiation medium and induced the fusion even in growth medium. The level of p204 in mouse heart muscle strongly increased during differentiation; it was barely detectable in 10. 5-day-old embryos, reached the peak level in 16.5-day-old embryos, and remained high thereafter. p204 is the second p200 family protein (after p202a) found to be involved in muscle differentiation. (p202a was formerly designated p202. The new designation is due to the identification of a highly similar protein-p202b [H. Wang, G. Chatterjee, J. J. Meyer, C. J. Liu, N. A. Manjunath, P. Bray-Ward, and P. Lengyel, Genomics 60:281-294, 1999].) These results reveal that p204 and p202a function in both muscle differentiation and interferon action
PMCID:88777
PMID: 10958697
ISSN: 0270-7306
CID: 43276
Characteristics of three homologous 202 genes (Ifi202a, Ifi202b, and Ifi202c) from the murine interferon-activatable gene 200 cluster
Wang H; Chatterjee G; Meyer JJ; Liu CJ; Manjunath NA; Bray-Ward P; Lengyel P
The Ifi202 gene is part of the interferon-activatable murine gene 200 cluster on chromosome 1. Ifi202 encodes the p202 protein whose overexpression is growth inhibitory and which can bind and inhibit the activity of numerous transcription factors including c-Jun, c-Fos, NF-kappaB, E2F-1, E2F-4, MyoD, and myogenin. We report here the exon-intron structure of Ifi202 and the discovery of Ifi202b and Ifi202c, close homologs of Ifi202 (whose designation we now change to Ifi202a). Ifi202a, b, and c were colocalized to chromosome 1 bands H4-H5 by fluorescence in situ hybridization. Ifi202b encodes p202b, which is interferon-inducible and differs from p202a in only 7 of 445 amino acids. 202b mRNA is constitutively expressed in tissues in which 202a mRNA is expressed. Ifi202c is apparently an unexpressed pseudogene. In murine embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) from 129 mice, the level of 202b mRNA is approximately half that of 202a mRNA. We knocked out the Ifi202a gene from 129 mice. The expression of 202b mRNA, but not 202a mRNA, persisted in the knockout mice and their MEFs at the same level as in wildtype mice. However, in MEFs from the knockout mice, the constitutive and interferon-induced levels of p202b were approximately as high as the constitutive and the interferon-induced levels of p202a plus p202b, respectively, in MEFs from wildtype mice. These findings suggest dosage compensation at the posttranscriptional level. This might account for the apparent lack of phenotype of the knockout mice
PMID: 10493828
ISSN: 0888-7543
CID: 43274
The interferon-inducible nucleolar p204 protein binds the ribosomal RNA-specific UBF1 transcription factor and inhibits ribosomal RNA transcription
Liu CJ; Wang H; Lengyel P
p204, a member of the interferon-inducible p200 family of murine proteins, is primarily nucleolar. We generated cell lines in which p204 was inducible by muristerone. This induction resulted in retardation of cell proliferation and inhibition of rRNA transcription in vivo. Interferon treatment, resulting in p204 induction and retardation of proliferation, also caused inhibition of rRNA transcription in vivo. p204 also inhibited rRNA transcription in vitro. This inhibition was overcome by addition of UBF1, the rRNA-specific transcription factor. A direct interaction between p204 and UBF1 was revealed in vitro in pull-down assays, and in vivo by co-immunoprecipitation from cell extracts. UBF1 bound strongly to at least two regions of p204: the N-terminal segment linked to the conserved 200 amino acid a segment, and the conserved 200 amino acid b segment. Cleavage of the a or b segments into two segments (encoded by single exons) resulted in a strong decrease or loss of binding. The inhibition of rRNA transcription by p204 may be due to the inhibition by p204 of the specific DNA binding of UBF1. This was revealed in electrophoretic mobility shift, magnetic bead and footprinting assays. Thus, p204 serves as a mediator of the inhibition of rRNA transcription by interferon
PMCID:1171365
PMID: 10329630
ISSN: 0261-4189
CID: 43275
Construction and screen of cDNA expression library from the rabbit oviduct epithelial cells
Liu CJ; Shen H; Zheng G; Lu JN; Tso JK
ORIGINAL:0006552
ISSN: 0264-6021
CID: 99199
Rabbit oviductin DPF1 is tissue specific but not species specific
Shen H; Liu CJ; Zheng G; Lu JN; Tso JK
ORIGINAL:0006545
ISSN: 1004-6453
CID: 99192
Low temperature induces oocytes p34cdc2 synthesis and accumulation -- the acquisition of competence to resume meiosis in toad oocytes
Lu JN; Zheng G; Shen H; Liu CJ; Tso JK
ORIGINAL:0006546
ISSN: 1001-0602
CID: 99193