Identification of a nuclear matrix targeting signal in the leukemia and bone-related AML/CBF-α transcription factors

  1. Congmei Zeng*,
  2. André J. van Wijnen*,
  3. Janet L. Stein*,
  4. Shari Meyers,
  5. Wuhua Sun,
  6. Lindsay Shopland*,
  7. Jeanne B. Lawrence*,
  8. Sheldon Penman,
  9. Jane B. Lian*,
  10. Gary S. Stein*,§, and
  11. Scott W. Hiebert
  1. *Department of Cell Biology, University of Massachusetts Medical School and Cancer Center, 55 Lake Avenue North, Worcester, MA 01655; Department of Biochemistry, Vanderbilt University, Medical Research Building II, Room 512, 21st and Garland, Nashville, TN 37232-0146; and Department of Biology, Building 68, Room 323, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139

Abstract

Transcription factors of the AML (core binding factor-α/polyoma enhancer binding protein 2) class are key transactivators of tissue-specific genes of the hematopoietic and bone lineages. Alternative splicing of the AML-1 gene results in two major AML variants, AML-1 and AML-1B. We show here that the transcriptionally active AML-1B binds to the nuclear matrix, and the inactive AML-1 does not. The association of AML-1B with the nuclear matrix is independent of DNA binding and requires a nuclear matrix targeting signal (NMTS), a 31 amino acid segment near the C terminus that is distinct from nuclear localization signals. A similar NMTS is present in AML-2 and the bone-related AML-3 transcription factors. Fusion of the AML-1B NMTS to the heterologous GAL4-(1–147) protein directs GAL4 to the nuclear matrix. Thus, the NMTS is necessary and sufficient to target the transcriptionally active AML-1B to the nuclear matrix. The loss of the C-terminal domain of AML-1B is a frequent consequence of the leukemia-related t(8;21) and t(3;21) translocations. Our results suggest this loss may be functionally linked to the modified interrelationships between nuclear structure and gene expression characteristic of cancer cells.

Footnotes

  • § To whom reprint requests should be addressed.

  • Sheldon Penman

  • ABBREVIATIONS:
    NMP,
    nuclear matrix protein;
    NMTS,
    nuclear matrix targeting signal;
    PML,
    promyelocytic-leukemia factor;
    DAPI,
    4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole;
    HA,
    hemagglutinin;
    TA,
    transactivation;
    rhd,
    runt homology domain
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