A functional genomic approach, based on systematic data gathering, was used to characterize a family of proteins containing a tripartite motif (TRIM). A total of 37 TRIM genes/proteins were studied, 21 of which were novel. The results demonstrate that TRIM proteins share a common function: by means of homo-multimerization they identify speci®c cell compartments.
Proteins of the Myc and Mad family are involved in transcriptional regulation and mediate cell differentiation and proliferation. These molecules share a basic-helix-loop-helix leucine zipper domain (bHLHZip) and bind DNA at the E box (CANNTG) consensus by forming heterodimers with Max. We report the isolation, characterization and mapping of a human gene and its mouse homolog encoding a new member of this family of proteins, named Rox. Through interaction mating and immunoprecipitation techniques, we demonstrate that Rox heterodimerizes with Max and weakly homodimerizes. Interestingly, bandshift assays demonstrate that the Rox-Max heterodimer shows a novel DNA binding specificity, having a higher affinity for the CACGCG site compared with the canonical E box CACGTG site. Transcriptional studies indicate that Rox represses transcription in both human HEK293 cells and yeast. We demonstrate that repression in yeast is through interaction between the N-terminus of the protein and the Sin3 co-repressor, as previously shown for the other Mad family members. ROX is highly expressed in quiescent fibroblasts and expression markedly decreases when cells enter the cell cycle. Moreover, ROX expression appears to be induced in U937 myeloid leukemia cells stimulated to differentiate with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate. The identification of a novel Max-interacting protein adds an important piece to the puzzle of Myc/Max/Mad coordinated action and function in normal and pathological situations. Furthermore, mapping of the human gene to chromosome 17p13.3 in a region that frequently undergoes loss of heterozygosity in a number of malignancies, together with the biochemical and expression features, suggest involvement of ROX in human neoplasia.
Opitz syndrome (OS) is a multiple congenital anomaly manifested by abnormal closure of midline structures. The gene responsible for the X-linked form of this disease, MID1, encodes a protein (midin) that contains a RING, two B-boxes, a coiled-coil (the so-called tripartite motif) and an RFP-like domain. The tripartite motif is characteristic of a family of proteins, named the B-box family, involved in cell proliferation and development. Since the subcellular compartmentalization and the ability to form multiprotein structures both appear to be crucial for the function of this family of proteins, we have studied these properties on the wild-type and mutated forms of midin. We found that endogenous midin is associated with microtubules throughout the cell cycle, co-localizing with cytoplasmic fibres in interphase and with the mitotic spindle and midbodies during mitosis and cytokinesis. Immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated the ability of the tripartite motif to mediate midin homodimerization, consistent with the evidence, obtained by gel filtration analysis, that midin exists in the form of large protein complexes. Functional characterization of altered forms of midin, resulting from mutations found in OS patients, revealed that association with microtubules is compromised, while the ability to homodimerize and form multiprotein complexes is retained. We suggest that midin is involved in the formation of multiprotein structures acting as anchor points to microtubules and that impaired association with these cytoskeletal structures causes OS developmental defects.
The B-box family is an expanding new family of genes encoding proteins involved in diverse cellular functions such as developmental patterning and oncogenesis. A member of this protein family, MID1, is the gene responsible for the X-linked form of Opitz G/BBB syndrome, a developmental disorder characterized by defects of the midline structures. We now report the identification of MID2, a new transcript closely related to MID1. MID2 maps to Xq22 in human and to the syntenic region on the mouse X chromosome. The two X-linked genes share the same domains, the same exon-intron organization, a high degree of similarity at the protein level and the same subcellular localization, both being confined to the cytoplasm in association to micro-tubular structures. The expression pattern studied by RNA in situ hybridization in mouse revealed that Mid2 is expressed early in development and the highest level of expression is detected in the heart, unlike Mid1 for which no expression was detected in the developing heart. Together, these data suggest that midin and MID2 have a similar biochemical function but a different physiological role during development.
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