4.7 Article

N and C-terminal sub-regions in the c-myc transactivation region and their joint role in creating versatility in folding and binding

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 346, Issue 1, Pages 175-189

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2004.11.029

Keywords

transactivation domain; binding; molten globule; circular dichroism; surface plasmon resonance

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The proto-oncogene c-myc governs the expression of a number of genes targeting cell growth and apoptosis, and its expression levels are distorted in many cancer forms. The current investigation presents an analysis by proteolysis, circular dichroism, fluorescence and Biacore of the folding and ligand-binding properties of the N-terminal transactivation domain (TAD) in the c-Myc protein. A c-Myc sub-region comprising residues 1-167 (Myc(1-167)) has been investigated that includes the unstructured c-Myc transactivation domain (TAD, residues 1-143) together with a C-terminal segment, which appears to promote increased folding. Myc(1-167) is partly helical, binds both to the target proteins Myc modulator-1 (MM-1) and TATA box-binding protein (TBP), and displays the characteristics of a molten globule. Limited proteolysis divides Myc(1-167) in two halves, by cleaving in a predicted linker region between two hotspot mutation regions: Myc box I (MBI) and Myc box II (MBII). The N-terminal half (Myc(1-88)) is unfolded and does not alone bind to target proteins, whereas the C-terminal half (Myc(92-167)) has a partly helical fold and specifically binds both MM-1 and TBP. Although this might suggest a bipartite organization in the c-Myc TAD, none of the N and C-terminal fragments bind target protein with as high affinity as the entire Myc(1-167), or display molten globule properties. Furthermore, merely linking the MBI with the C-terminal region, in Myc(38-167), is not sufficient to achieve binding and folding properties as in Myc(1-167). Thus, the entire N and C-terminal regions of c-Myc TAD act in concert to achieve high specificity and affinity to two structurally and functionally orthogonal target proteins, TBP and MM-1, possibly through a mechanism involving molten globule formation. This hints towards understanding how binding of a range of targets can be accomplished to a single transactivation domain. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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