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Papers In Press, published online ahead of print December 31, 2001
J. Biol. Chem, 10.1074/jbc.M111900200
Submitted on December 13, 2001
Revised on December 31, 2001
Accepted on December 31, 2001
Department of Molecular Genetics, Rudjer Boskovic Institute, Zagreb 10000
Corresponding Author: msopta{at}rudjer.irb.hr
The retinoblastoma family of proteins are key cell cycle regulatory molecules important for the differentiation of various mammalian cell types. The retinoblastoma protein regulates transcription of a variety of genes either by blocking the activation domain of various activators or by active repression via recruitment to appropriate promoters. We show here that the retinoblastoma family of proteins function as direct transcriptional repressors in a heterologous yeast system when fused to the DNA binding domain of Gal4. Mapping experiments indicate that either the A or the B domain of the pocket region is sufficient for repression in vivo. As is the case in mammalian cells, a phosphorylation site mutant of the retinoblastoma protein is a stronger transcriptional repressor than the wild type protein. We show that transcriptional repression by pRb is dependent on CLN3 in vivo. Furthermore, the yeast histone deacetylase components, RPD3 and SIN3, are required for transcriptional repression.
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