4.6 Article

BCL11A-dependent recruitment of SIRT1 to a promoter template in mammalian cells results in histone deacetylation and transcriptional repression

Journal

ARCHIVES OF BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS
Volume 434, Issue 2, Pages 316-325

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.abb.2004.10.028

Keywords

SIRT1; Bcl11a; CTIP1; Evi9; transcriptional reprcssion; histone deacetylase

Funding

  1. NIEHS NIH HHS [P30 ES000210, ES00210, P30 ES000210-35] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM60852, R01 GM060852, R01 GM060852-02] Funding Source: Medline

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The B cell leukemia 11A protein (BCL11A/Evi9/CTIP1) has been implicated in hematopoietic cell development and malignancies. BCL11A is a transcriptional repressor that binds directly to a GC-rich motif and is also recruited to a promoter template via interaction with the orphan nuclear receptor, chicken ovalbumin upstream promoter transcription factor II. In both cases, BCL11A-mediated transcriptional repression is only minimally reversed by trichostatin A, suggesting the possible lack of involvement of class I or II histone deacetylases. Nonetheless, chromatin immunoprecipitation assays revealed that expression of BCL11A in mammalian cells resulted in deacetylation of histories H3 and/or H4 that were associated with the promoter region of a reporter gene. BCL11A-mediated transcriptional repression, as well as deacetylation of historic H3/H4 in BCL11A-transfected cells, was partially reversed by nicotinamide, an inhibitor of class III historic deacetylases Such as SIRT1. SIRT1 was found to interact directly with BCL11A and was recruited to the promoter template in a BCL11A-dependent manner leading to transcriptional repression. These findings define a role for SIRT1 in transcriptional repression mediated by BCL11A in mammalian cells. (C) 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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