ErbB-4 s80 intracellular domain abrogates ETO2-dependent transcriptional repression

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Abstract

ErbB-4 is cleaved by α- and γ-secretases to release a soluble 80-kDa intracellular domain, termed s80, which translocates to the nucleus. s80 is present in the nucleus of normal and cancerous mammary cells and is predicted to have a role in cell differentiation. To further investigate the mechanism by which s80 may mediate differentiation, we tested whether s80 regulates Eto2, a transcriptional corepressor that is involved in erythrocyte differentiation and is also implicated in human breast cancer. Here we show that ligand binding to ErbB-4 causes s80 translocation to the nucleus, where it colocalizes and interacts with Eto2. Expression of s80 blocks Eto2-mediated transcriptional repression of a heterologous promoter. This effect on Eto2 does not require s80 kinase activity and is mediated by the carboxyl-terminal region of s80. Although other cell surface receptors regulate transcription by activating signal transduction cascades, these data present a novel mechanism of corepressor regulation and suggest a role for Eto2 in ErbB-4-dependent differentiation. © 2006 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Linggi, B., & Carpenter, G. (2006). ErbB-4 s80 intracellular domain abrogates ETO2-dependent transcriptional repression. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 281(35), 25373–25380. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M603998200

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