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Bach1, a heme-dependent transcription factor, reveals presence of multiple heme binding sites with distinct coordination structure

Journal

IUBMB LIFE
Volume 59, Issue 8-9, Pages 542-551

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1080/15216540701225941

Keywords

transcription factor; heme mediated regulation; heme oxygenase; spectroscopic characterization; heme binding mode

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The mammalian transcription factor Bach1 functions as a repressor of the enhancers of heme oxygenase- 1 ( HO- 1) gene ( Hmox- 1) by forming heterodimers with the small Maf proteins such as MafK. The transcription of Hmox- 1 is regulated by the substrate of HO- 1, heme. Heme induces expression of Hmox- 1 in part by inhibiting the binding of Bach1 to the enhancers and inducing the nuclear export of Bach1. A dipeptide motif of cysteine and proline ( CP motif) in Bach1 is essential for the heme- mediated regulation. In this study, we show that. ve molecules of heme bind to Bach1 by the heme- titration assay. The Bach1- heme complex exhibits an absorption spectrum with a major Soret peak at 371 nm and Raman band at 343 cm(-1) in high amounts of heme and a spectrum containing the major Soret peak at 423 nm at low heme concentrations. The spectroscopic characterization indicates that Bach1 has two kinds of heme- binding sites with diff. erent coordination structures. Mutagenesis studies have established that four molecules of heme bind to the cysteine residues of four CP motifs in the C terminus of Bach1. These results raise the possibility that two separated activities of Bach1, DNA- binding and nuclear export, are regulated by heme binding at the different CP motifs of Bach1 respectively, but not by cooperative hemebinding.

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