The t(12;21) Translocation Converts AML-1B from an Activator to a Repressor of Transcription

  • Hiebert S
  • Sun W
  • Nathan Davis J
  • et al.
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Abstract

The t(12;21) translocation is present in up to 30% of childhood B-cell acute lymphoblastic and fuses a potential dimerization motif from the ets-related factor TEL to the N terminus of AML1. The t(12;21) translocation encodes a 93-kDa fusion protein that localizes to a high-salt- and detergent-resistant nuclear compartment. This protein binds the enhancer core motif, TGTGGT, and interacts with the AML-1-binding protein, core-binding factor beta. Although TEL/AML-1B retains the C-terminal domain of AML-1B that is required for transactivation of the T-cell receptor beta enhancer, it fails to activate transcription but rather inhibits the basal activity of this enhancer. TEL/AML-1B efficiently interferes with AML-1B dependent transactivation of the T-cell receptor beta enhancer, and coexpression of wild-type TEL does not reverse this inhibition. The N-terminal TEL helix-loop-helix domain is essential for TEL/AML-1B-mediated repression. Thus, the t(12;21) fusion protein dominantly interferes with AML-1B-dependent transcription, suggesting that the inhibition of expression of AML-1 genes is critical for B-cell leukemogenesis.

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Hiebert, S. W., Sun, W., Nathan Davis, J., Golub, T., Shurtleff, S., Buijs, A., … Meyers, S. (1996). The t(12;21) Translocation Converts AML-1B from an Activator to a Repressor of Transcription. Molecular and Cellular Biology, 16(4), 1349–1355. https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.16.4.1349

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