Multiple subnuclear targeting signals of the leukemia-related AML1/ETO and ETO repressor proteins

  1. Karina Barseguian*,
  2. Bart Lutterbach,
  3. Scott W. Hiebert,
  4. Jeffrey Nickerson*,
  5. Jane B. Lian*,
  6. Janet L. Stein*,
  7. Andre J. van Wijnen*, and
  8. Gary S. Stein*,
  1. *Department of Cell Biology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA 01655-0106; and Department of Biochemistry, Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37232
  1. Communicated by Sheldon Penman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA (received for review July 15, 2002)

Abstract

Leukemic disease can be linked to aberrant gene expression. This often is the result of molecular alterations in transcription factors that lead to their misrouting within the nucleus. The acute myelogenous leukemia-related fusion protein AML1/ETO is a striking example. It originates from a gene rearrangement t(8;21) that fuses the N-terminal part of the key hematopoietic regulatory factor AML1 (RUNX1) to the ETO (MTG8) repressor protein. AML1/ETO lacks the intranuclear targeting signal of the wild-type AML1 and is directed by the ETO component to alternate nuclear matrix-associated sites. To understand this aberrant subnuclear trafficking of AML1/ETO, we created a series of mutations in the ETO protein. These were characterized biochemically by immunoblotting and in situ by immunofluorescence microscopy. We identified two independent subnuclear targeting signals in the N- and C-terminal regions of ETO that together direct ETO to the same binding sites occupied by AML1/ETO. However, each segment alone is targeted to a different intranuclear location. The N-terminal segment contains a nuclear localization signal and the conserved hydrophobic heptad repeat domain responsible for protein dimerization and interaction with the mSin3A transcriptional repressor. The C-terminal segment spans the nervy domain and the zinc finger region, which together support interactions with the corepressors N-CoR and HDACs. Our findings provide a molecular basis for aberrant subnuclear targeting of the AML1/ETO protein, which is a principal defect in t(8;21)-related acute myelogenous leukemia.

Footnotes

  • To whom correspondence should be addressed at: Department of Cell Biology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, 55 Lake Avenue North, Worcester, MA 01655-0106. E-mail: gary.stein{at}umassmed.edu.

  • Abbreviations:
    1. HHR, hydrophobic heptad repeat

    2. AML, acute myelogenous leukemia

    3. NMTS, nuclear matrix targeting signal

    4. ZF, zinc finger

    5. WC, whole cell

    6. NMIF, nuclear matrix intermediate filament

« Previous | Next Article »Table of Contents