“…Myc's N-terminal 143 amino acids contain a transcriptional regulatory domain (Kato et al, 1990) that interacts with different co-factors, such as TRRAP, a component of several histone acetyltransferase (HAT) complexes (McMahon et al, 1998), the STAGA HAT Liu et al, 2003;Liu et al, 2008), the DNA helicases Tip48 and Tip49 that also belong to different HAT and chromatin remodeling complexes , and the elongation factor P-TEFb (Eberhardy and Farnham, 2002). Accordingly, a version of c-Myc that lacks the first 100 amino acids is inefficient in trans-activating its target genes (Spotts et al, 1997;Xiao et al, 1998;Hirst and Grandori, 2000), and it is unable to transform primary cells in culture (Xiao et al, 1998) or promote cell cycle re-entry of serumstarved fibroblasts (Hirst and Grandori, 2000).…”