Acetylation control of the retinoblastoma tumour-suppressor protein.

Article Details

Citation

Chan HM, Krstic-Demonacos M, Smith L, Demonacos C, La Thangue NB

Acetylation control of the retinoblastoma tumour-suppressor protein.

Nat Cell Biol. 2001 Jul;3(7):667-74. doi: 10.1038/35083062.

PubMed ID
11433299 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The retinoblastoma tumour-suppressor protein (pRb) and p300/CBP co-activator proteins are important for control of proliferation and in tumour cells these are sequestered by viral oncoproteins such as E1A. pRb is involved in negatively regulating growth, and p300/CBP proteins have histone acetyltransferase (HAT) activity, which influences gene expression. Although it is known that phosphorylation by G1 cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) regulates pRb activity, the nature and role of other post-translational modifications is not understood. Here we identify acetylation as a new type of modification and level of control in pRb function. Adenovirus E1A, which binds p300/CBP through an amino-terminal transformation-sensitive domain, stimulates the acetylation of pRb by recruiting p300 and pRb into a multimeric-protein complex. Furthermore, pRb acetylation is under cell-cycle control, and acetylation hinders the phosphorylation of pRb by cyclin-dependent kinases. pRb binds more strongly when acetylated to the MDM2 oncoprotein, which indicates that acetylation may regulate protein-protein interactions in the pRb pathway. The acetylation of pRb defines a new level of cell-cycle control mediated by HAT. Furthermore, our results establish a relationship between p300, pRb and acetylation in which E1A acts to recruit and target a cellular HAT activity to pRb.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Histone acetyltransferase p300Q09472Details