The calcium-responsive transactivator recruits CREB binding protein to nuclear bodies.

Article Details

Citation

Pradhan A, Liu Y

The calcium-responsive transactivator recruits CREB binding protein to nuclear bodies.

Neurosci Lett. 2004 Nov 11;370(2-3):191-5.

PubMed ID
15488321 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The calcium-responsive transactivator (CREST) is required for the normal development of neuronal dendritic trees. Here we report that CREST is localized to sub-nuclear structures in the rat neuroendocrine pheochromocytoma PC12 cells. A yellow fluorescence protein-CREST fusion protein was expressed in HEK 293 and PC12 cells and the recombinant protein was exclusively targeted to nuclear bodies. A similar result was obtained with a Flag-tagged CREST. Deleting the N-terminal 148 or the C-terminal 79 amino acid sequences had no effect on targeting, whereas removing 164 amino acid residues from the C-terminus abolished nuclear body localization. We found that CREST did not co-localize with promyelocytic leukaemia oncoprotein (PML) body and was not targeted to PML bodies. Overexpression of CREST markedly increased the number of nuclear bodies positive for the histone acetyltransferase CREB binding protein (CBP). Double immunofluorescence staining of Flag-CREST and CBP suggested that CREST and CBP had a high degree of co-localization within the nuclear bodies. Deletion of the CBP binding domain of CREST inhibited the recruitment of CBP to CREST nuclear bodies. These results suggest that CBP recruitment to nuclear bodies by CREST may play an important role in CREST-mediated calcium-responsive transactivation, and CREST nuclear body may function as an assembly site for activators/co-activators in gene transcription control.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
CREB-binding proteinQ92793Details