The LIM-domain binding protein Ldb1 and its partner LMO2 act as negative regulators of erythroid differentiation
- Division of Hematology-Oncology, Children’s Hospital and the Dana–Farber Cancer Institute, Department of Pediatrics, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115
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Contributed by Stuart H. Orkin
Abstract
The nuclear LIM domain protein LMO2, a T cell oncoprotein, is essential for embryonic erythropoiesis. LIM-only proteins are presumed to act primarily through protein-protein interactions. We, and others, have identified a widely expressed protein, Ldb1, whose C-terminal 76-residues are sufficient to mediate interaction with LMO2. In murine erythroleukemia cells, the endogenous Lbd1 and LMO2 proteins exist in a stable complex, whose binding affinity appears greater than that between LMO2 and the bHLH transcription factor SCL. However, Ldb1, LMO2, and SCL/E12 can assemble as a multiprotein complex on a consensus SCL binding site. Like LMO2, the Ldb1 gene is expressed in fetal liver and erythroid cell lines. Forced expression of Ldb1 in G1ER proerythroblast cells inhibited cellular maturation, a finding compatible with the decrease in Ldb1 gene expression that normally occurs during erythroid differentiation. Overexpression of the LMO2 gene also inhibited erythroid differentiation. Our studies demonstrate a function for Ldb1 in hemopoietic cells and suggest that one role of the Ldb1/LMO2 complex is to maintain erythroid precursors in an immature state.
Footnotes
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↵ * Present address: The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, P.O. Royal Melbourne Hospital, Victoria, 3050, Australia.
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↵ † To whom reprint requests should be addressed at: Division of Hematology, Children’s Hospital, 300 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115.
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Data deposition: The sequence reported in this paper has been deposited in the GenBank database (accession no. AF030333)
- ABBREVIATION:
- SCL,
- SCL/tal-1;
- MEL,
- murine erythroleukemia;
- LdB1,
- NL-1/lbd1/Clim-2 protein;
- G1ER,
- GATA-1− (G1E) cells expressing GATA-1/ER;
- HA,
- hemagglutinin
- Copyright © 1997, The National Academy of Sciences of the USA








