The HOX11 gene encodes a DNA-binding nuclear transcription factor belonging to a distinct family of homeobox genes

  1. T N Dear,
  2. I Sanchez-Garcia, and
  3. T H Rabbitts
  1. Medical Research Council, Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, United Kingdom.

Abstract

A translocation involving human chromosome 10, band q24, in a subset of T-cell acute leukemias disrupts a region surrounding the putative oncogene HOX11, which encodes a protein with a homeodomain. The HOX11 protein binds to a specific DNA sequence, it localizes to the cell nucleus, and it transactivates transcription of a reporter gene linked to a cis-regulatory element, suggesting that HOX11 functions in vivo as a positive transcription activator. PCR analysis shows that the HOX11 homeodomain is a member of a distinct class of homeodomains, representatives of which occur in murine and Drosophila genomes. These all contain a threonine residue in place of the more common isoleucine or valine in helix 3 of the homeodomain. HOX11 therefore appears to belong to a family of DNA-binding transactivators of transcription.

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