7 research outputs found

    Loss of FBP function arrests cellular proliferation and extinguishes c-myc expression

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    The c-myc regulatory region includes binding sites for a large set of transcription factors. The present studies demonstrate that in the absence of FBP [far upstream element (FUSE)-binding protein], which binds to the single-stranded FUSE, the remainder of the set fails to sustain endogenous c-myc expression. A dominant-negative FBP DNA-binding domain lacking effector activity or an antisense FBP RNA, expressed via replication-defective adenovirus vectors, arrested cellular proliferation and extinguished native c-myc transcription from the P1 and P2 promoters. The dominant-negative FBP initially augmented the single-stranded character of FUSE; however, once c-myc expression was abolished, melting at FUSE could no longer be supported. In contrast, with antisense FBP RNA, the single-stranded character of FUSE decreased monotonically as the transcription of endogenous c-myc declined. Because transcription is the major source of super-coiling in vivo, we propose that by binding torsionally strained DNA, FBP measures promoter activity directly. We also show that FUSE is predicted to behave as a torsion-regulated switch poised to regulate c-myc and to confer a higher order regulation on a large repertoire of factors

    3' untranslated regions of c-myc and c-fos mRNAs: multifunctional elements regulating mRNA translation, degradation and subcellular localization

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    International audienc

    3´ Untranslated Regions of c-myc and c-fos mRNAs: Multifunctional Elements Regulating mRNA Translation, Degradation and Subcellular Localization

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    What retroviruses teach us about the involvement of c-Myc in leukemias and lymphomas

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