4.5 Article

A previously unidentified amino-terminal domain regulates transcriptional activity of wild-type and disease-associated human GLI2

Journal

HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
Volume 14, Issue 15, Pages 2181-2188

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddi222

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [P30 CA046592, R01 CA087837-07, CA87837, R01 CA087837] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIAMS NIH HHS [R01 AR045973, AR45973] Funding Source: Medline

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Zinc finger-containing Gli proteins mediate responsiveness to Hedgehog (Hh) signaling, with Gli2 acting as the major transcriptional activator in this pathway in mice. The discovery of disease-associated mutations points to a critical role for GLI2 in human Hh signaling as well. Here, we show that human GLI2 contains previously undescribed 5' sequence, extending the amino-terminus an additional 328 amino acids. In vitro, transcriptional activity of full-length GLI2 is up to 30 times lower than that of GLI2 Delta N (previously thought to represent the entire GLI2 protein), revealing the presence of an amino-terminal repressor domain in the full-length protein. GLI2 Delta N also exhibits potent transcriptional activity in vivo: overexpression in mouse skin leads to the formation of Hh-independent epithelial downgrowths resembling basal cell carcinomas, which in humans are associated with constitutive Hh signaling. The discovery of this additional, functionally relevant GLI2 sequence led us to re-examine several pathogenic human GLI2 mutants, now containing the entire amino-terminal domain. On the basis of the functional domains affected by the mutations, mutant GLI2 proteins exhibited either loss-of-function or dominant-negative activity. Moreover, deletion of the amino-terminus abrogated dominant-negative activity of mutant GLI2, revealing that this domain is required for transcriptional repressor activity of pathogenic GLI2. Our results establish the presence of an amino-terminal transcriptional repressor domain that plays a critical role in modulating the function of wild-type GLI2 and is essential for dominant-negative activity of a GLI2 mutant associated with human disease.

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