Acetylation and MAPK phosphorylation cooperate to regulate the degradation of active GATA-1

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Abstract

Regulation of transcription requires mechanisms to both activate and terminate transcription factor activity. GATA-1 is a key haemopoietic transcription factor whose activity is increased by acetylation. We show here that acetylated GATA-1 is targeted for degradation via the ubiquitin/proteasome pathway. Acetylation positively signals ubiquitination, suggesting that activation by acetylation simultaneously marks GATA-1 for degradation. Promoter-specific MAPK phosphorylation then cooperates with acetylation to execute protein loss. The requirement for both modifications is novel and suggests a way by which degradation of the active protein can be specifically regulated in response to external phosphorylation-mediated signalling. As many transcription factors are activated by acetylation, we suggest that this might be a general mechanism to control transcription factor activity. © 2006 European Molecular Biology Organization | All Rights Reserved.

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Hernandez-Hernandez, A., Ray, P., Litos, G., Ciro, M., Ottolenghi, S., Beug, H., & Boyes, J. (2006). Acetylation and MAPK phosphorylation cooperate to regulate the degradation of active GATA-1. EMBO Journal, 25(14), 3264–3274. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.emboj.7601228

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