The nuclear factor p92, originally discovered by its interaction with the human papillomavirus type 18 enhancer, is a cellular protein whose activity is restricted to S phase in human primary fibroblasts. The human papillomavirus type 18 p92 binding sequence confers enhancer activity on a heterologous promoter, suggesting that p92 acts as a transcription factor. We have identified a class of nuclear inhibitory proteins, I-92s, which noncovalently associate with p92 but not with other transcription factors such as AP1, E2F, or NF-κB. Different I-92s occur in G1, G2, and G0, while no I-92 is detectable in S phase. Phase-specific inhibitors, therefore, are responsible for the cell cycle dependence of p92 activity and provide a novel mechanism linking transcription factor regulation with the cell cycle.
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Grinstein, E., Weinert, I., Droese, B., Pagano, M., & Royer, H. D. (1996). Cell cycle regulation of nuclear factor p92 DNA-binding activity by novel phase-specific inhibitors. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 271(16), 9215–9222. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.271.16.9215