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Transcriptional Regulation

MBDin, a Novel MBD2-Interacting Protein, Relieves MBD2 Repression Potential and Reactivates Transcription from Methylated Promoters

, , , , , & show all
Pages 1656-1665 | Received 26 Aug 2002, Accepted 02 Dec 2002, Published online: 27 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

We have identified a human gene encoding a novel MBD2-interacting protein (MBDin) that contains an N-terminal GTP-binding site, a putative nuclear export signal (NES), and a C-terminal acidic region. MBDin cDNA was isolated through a two-hybrid interaction screening using the methyl-CpG-binding protein MBD2 as bait. The presence of the C-terminal 46-amino-acid region of MBD2 and both the presence of the acidic C-terminal 128-amino-acid region and the integrity of the GTP-binding site of MBDin were required for the interaction. Interaction between MBD2 and MBDin in mammalian cells was confirmed by immunoprecipitation experiments. Fluorescence imaging experiments demonstrated that MBDin mainly localizes in the cytoplasm but accumulates in the nucleus upon disruption of the NES or treatment with leptomycin B, an inhibitor of NES-mediated transport. We also found that MBDin partially colocalizes with MBD2 at foci of heavily methylated satellite DNA. An MBD2 deletion mutant lacking the C-terminal region maintained its subnuclear localization but failed to recruit MBDin at hypermethylated foci. Functional analyses demonstrated that MBDin relieves MBD2-mediated transcriptional repression both when Gal4 chimeric constructs and when in vitro-methylated promoter-reporter plasmids were used in transcriptional assays. Southern blotting and bisulfite analysis showed that transcriptional reactivation occurred without changes of the promoter methylation pattern. Our findings suggest the existence of factors that could be targeted on methylated DNA by methyl-CpG-binding proteins reactivating transcription even prior to demethylation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank M. Yoshida (University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan) for the kind gift of LMB.

This work was supported by grants from the Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (AIRC), from the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR), from the Ministero dell'Università e della Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica (MIUR), and from the Ministero della Salute.

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