Abstract
The differentiation of the ND7 neuronal cell line to a nondividing phenotype hearing numerous neurite processes is accompanied by a dramatic increase in the levels of the activating POU family transcription factor Brn- 3a and a corresponding fall in the levels of the closely related inhibitory factor Brn-3b. We have previously shown that the artificial overexpression of Brn-3a in these cells can induce neurite outgrowth and the activation of genes encoding synaptic vesicle proteins in the absence of a differentiation- inducing stimulus. Here we show that overexpression of Brn-3b can reduce process outgrowth and synaptic vesicle gene expression following exposure to a stimulus which would normally induce differentiation. These inhibitory effects are abolished by altering a single amino acid in the POU homeodomain of Brn-3b to its equivalent in Brn-3a. The converse mutation in Brn-3a allows it to inhibit process outgrowth in response to a differentiation-inducing stimulus. Hence a single amino acid difference results in these closely related factors having opposite effects and allows the balance between them to regulate differentiation.
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CITATION STYLE
Smith, M. D., Dawson, S. J., & Latchman, D. S. (1997). Inhibition of neuronal process outgrowth and neuronal specific gene activation by the Brn-3b transcription factor. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 272(2), 1382–1388. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.2.1382
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