Abstract
Hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 (HNF-4) is a member of the nuclear-receptor gene superfamily. HNF-4 binds to response elements of several liver-enriched genes and exhibits a restricted pattern of expression, suggesting an important role for HNF-4 in tissue-specific gene regulation. Here, we report the generation of three mutated forms of the HNF-4 protein, their effects on the ability of the protein to transactivate through HNF-4-response elements, and their ability to suppress transactivation by the wild-type protein. Two mutated forms of the HNF-4 protein, one in which the DNA-binding domain has been deleted and another in which the HNF-4 proximal box has been replaced by that of the glucocorticoid receptor, behaved as inhibitors of the wild-type protein. The properties of a carboxy-terminal-deletion mutant allow us to propose a region of HNF-4 involved in transactivation.
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Taraviras, S., Schütz, G., & Kelsey, G. (1997). Generation of inhibitory mutants of hepatocyte nuclear factor 4. European Journal of Biochemistry, 244(3), 883–889. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1997.00883.x
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