23 research outputs found
Nucleotide Sequence of an Arabidopsis thaliana Turgor-Responsive TMP-B cDNA Clone Encoding Transmembrane Protein with a Major Intrinsic Protein Motif
Cloning the interferon regulatory factor 1 gene in lungfish (Protopterus annectens) and its molecular evolution among sarcopterygians
Physiological evidence for diversification of IFNα- and IFNβ-mediated response programs in different autoimmune diseases
Interactions with Commensal and Pathogenic Bacteria Induce HIV-1 Latency in Macrophages through Altered Transcription Factor Recruitment to the Long Terminal Repeat
Induction of Samhd1 by interferon gamma and lipopolysaccharide in murine macrophages requires IRF1
A model of the three-dimensional structure of human interferon responsive factor 1 and its modifications upon phosphorylation or phosphorylation-mimicking mutations
Analysis of PU.1/ICSBP (IRF-8) complex formation with various PU.1 mutants: molecular cloning of rat Icsbp (Irf-8) cDNA
Interaction between interferon consensus sequence-binding protein and COP9/signalosome subunit CSN2 (Trip15) - A possible link between interferon regulatory factor signaling and the COP9/signalosome
Interferon consensus sequence-binding protien (ICSBP) is a member of the interferon regulatory factors (IRF) that has a pivotal role in mediating resistance to pathologenic infections in mice and in promoting the differentiation of myeloid cells. ICSBP exerts some of its transcriptional activities via association with other factors that enable its binding to a variety of promoters containing DNA composite elements. These interactions are mediated through a specific COOH-terminal domain termed IAD (IRF association domain). To again a broader insight of the capacity of ICSBP to interact with other factors, yeast two-hybrid screens were performed using ICSBP-IAD as a bait against a B-cell cDNA library. Trip15 was identified as a specific interacting factor with ICSBP in yeast cells, which was also confirmed by in vitro glutathione S-transferase pull-down assays and by coimmunoprecipitation studies in COS7 cells. Trip15 was recently identified as a component of the COp9/ signalosome (CSN) complex composed of eight evolutionary conserved subunits and thus termed CSN2. This complex has a role in cell-signaling processes, which is manifested by its associated novel kinase activity and by the involvement of its subunits in regulating multiple cell-signaling pathways and cell-cycle progression. We show that in vitro association of ICSBP with the CSN lead to phosphorylation of ICSBP at a unique serine residue within its IAD. The phosphorylated residue is essential for efficient association with IRF-1 and thus for the repressor activity of ICSBP exerted on IRF-1. This suggests that the CSN has a role in intergrating incoming signals that affect the transcriptional activity of ICSBP
