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Article
The tissue-specific nuclear matrix protein, NMP-2, is a member of the AML/CBF/PEBP2/runt domain transcription factor family: interactions with the osteocalcin gene promoter
Morningside Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences Student Publications
  • Harold L. Merriman
  • Andre J. Van Wijnen, University of Massachusetts Medical School
  • Scott W. Hiebert
  • Joseph P. Bidwell
  • Edward G. Fey
  • Jane B. Lian, University of Massachusetts Medical School
  • Janet L. Stein, University of Massachusetts Medical School
  • Gary S. Stein, University of Massachusetts Medical School
UMMS Affiliation
Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences; Department of Cell Biology
Publication Date
1995-10-10
Document Type
Article
Abstract

The nuclear matrix protein, NMP-2, was originally identified as an osteoblast-specific DNA-binding complex localized exclusively to the nuclear matrix. NMP-2 was shown to recognize two binding sites, site A (nt-605 to -599) and site B (nt -441 to -435), in the rat bone-specific osteocalcin gene promoter. This study shows that the NMP-2 binding sites A and B as well as a third NMP-2 binding site (nt -135 to -130) constitute a consensus sequence, ATGCTGGT, and represent an AML-1 recognition motif. AML-1 is a member of the AML transcription factor family which is associated with acute myelogenous leukemia and binds to the sequence TGCTGGT via its DNA-binding runt domain. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays reveal that a component of NMP-2 is a member of the AML/PEBP2/runt domain transcription factor family based on cross-competition with AML-1 consensus oligonucleotide. Limited immunoreactivity of NMP-2 with a polyclonal N-terminal AML-1 antibody and inability of the AML-1 partner protein CBF-beta to form complexes with NMP-2 indicate that NMP-2 is not identical to AML-1 but represents a variant AML/PEBP2/runt domain protein. Western and Northern blots reveal the presence of multiple AML-related proteins and AML-1 transcripts in several osseous cell lines. Furthermore, our results indicate that AML family members may selectively partition between nuclear matrix and nonmatrix compartments. Because proteins that contain a runt domain are implicated in tissue-specific transcriptional regulation, our results support the concept that the nuclear matrix mediates osteoblast-specific expression of the osteocalcin gene.

DOI of Published Version
10.1021/bi00040a025
Source

Biochemistry. 1995 Oct 10;34(40):13125-32.

Related Resources

Link to article in PubMed

PubMed ID
7548073
Citation Information
Harold L. Merriman, Andre J. Van Wijnen, Scott W. Hiebert, Joseph P. Bidwell, et al.. "The tissue-specific nuclear matrix protein, NMP-2, is a member of the AML/CBF/PEBP2/runt domain transcription factor family: interactions with the osteocalcin gene promoter" Vol. 34 Iss. 40 (1995) ISSN: 0006-2960 (Print)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/harold_merriman/1/