1. The oligomeric state of CtBP determines its role as a transcriptional co-activator and co-repressor of Wingless targets.
- Author
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Bhambhani, Chandan, Chang, Jinhee L, Akey, David L, and Cadigan, Ken M
- Subjects
- *
APTERYGOTA , *GENETIC transcription , *MONOMERS , *ENZYME activation , *ENZYME inhibitors , *GENE targeting - Abstract
C-terminal-binding protein (CtBP) is a well-characterized transcriptional co-repressor that requires homo-dimerization for its activity. CtBP can both repress and activate Wingless nuclear targets in Drosophila. Here, we examine the role of CtBP dimerization in these opposing processes. CtBP mutants that cannot dimerize are able to promote Wingless signalling, but are defective in repressing Wingless targets. To further test the role of dimerization in repression, the positions of basic and acidic residues that form inter-molecular salt bridges in the CtBP dimerization interface were swapped. These mutants cannot homo-dimerize and are compromised for repression. However, their co-expression leads to hetero-dimerization and consequent repression of Wingless targets. Our results support a model where CtBP is a gene-specific regulator of Wingless signalling, with some targets requiring CtBP dimers for inhibition while other targets utilize CtBP monomers for activation of their expression. Functional interactions between CtBP and Pygopus, a nuclear protein required for Wingless signalling, support a model where monomeric CtBP acts downstream of Pygopus in activating some Wingless targets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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