4.5 Article

Bromodomain analysis of Brd2-dependent transcriptional activation of cyclin A

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 387, Issue -, Pages 257-269

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20041793

Keywords

bromodomain; cell cycle; chromatin; cyclin A; histone acetylase; transcription

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [CA75107, CA84193, R01 CA084193, R03 CA102889, CA102889, R29 CA075107] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NCRR NIH HHS [P41 RR010888] Funding Source: Medline

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Cyclin A is regulated primarily through transcription control during the mammalian cell cycle. A dual mechanism of cyclin A transcriptional repression involves, on the one hand, promoter-bound inhibitory complexes of E2F transcription factors and RB (retinoblastoma) family proteins, and on the other, chromatin-directed histone deacetylase activity that is recruited to the cyclin A promoter early in the cell cycle in association with these RB proteins. This dual regulation maintains transcriptional silence of the cyclin A locus until its transcription is required in S-phase. At that time, RB family members dissociate from E2F proteins and nucleosomal restructuring of the locus takes place, to permit transcriptional activation and resultant S-phase progression to proceed. We have identified a double bromodomain-containing protein Brd2, which exhibits apparent 'scaffold' or transcriptional adapter functions and mediates recruitment of both E2F transcription factors and chromatin-remodelling activity to the cyclin A promoter. We have shown previously that Brd2-containing nuclear, multiprotein complexes contain E2F-1 and -2. In the present study, we show that, in S-phase, they also contain histone H4-directed acetylase activity. Overexpression of Brd2 in fibroblasts accelerates the cell cycle through increased expression of cyclin A and its associated cyclin-dependent kinase activity. Chromatin immunoprecipitation studies show that Brd2 is physically present at the cyclin A promoter and its overexpression promotes increased histone H4 acetylation at the promoter as it becomes transcriptionally active, suggesting a new model for the dual regulation of cyclin A.

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