Abstract
The leukemia-associated fusion protein MN1-TEL combines the transcription-activating domains of MN1 with the DNA-binding domain of the transcriptional repressor TEL. Quantitative photobleaching experiments revealed that ~20% of GFP-tagged MN1 and TEL is transiently immobilised, likely due to indirect or direct DNA binding, since transcription inhibition abolished immobilisation. Interestingly, ~50% of the MN1-TEL fusion protein was immobile with much longer binding times than unfused MN1 and TEL. MN1-TEL immobilisation was not observed when the TEL DNA-binding domain was disrupted, suggesting that MN1-TEL stably occupies TEL recognition sequences, preventing binding of factors required for proper transcription regulation, which may contribute to leukemogenesis. © 2012 ter Haar et al.
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CITATION STYLE
ter Haar, W. M., Meester-Smoor, M. A., van Wely, K. H. M., Schot, C. C. M. M., Janssen, M. J. F. W., Geverts, B., … Zwarthoff, E. C. (2012). The Leukemia-Associated Fusion Protein MN1-TEL Blocks TEL-Specific Recognition Sequences. PLoS ONE, 7(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0046085
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