Abstract

c-Myb is the founder member of a class of transcription factors with tryptophan-rich repeats responsible for DNA binding. Activated oncogenic forms of Myb are encoded by the avian retroviruses, avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV) and E26. AMV v-Myb encodes a truncated protein with 11 point mutations relative to c-Myb. The mutations in the DNA binding domain (DBD) were reported to impose distinct phenotypes of differentiation on transformed myeloid cells (Introna, M., Golay, J., Frampton, J., Nakano, T., Ness, S. A., and Graf, T. (1990) Cell 63, 1287-1297). The molecular mechanism operating has remained elusive since no change in sequence specificity has been found. We introduced AMV-specific point mutations in the minimal DBD of chicken c-Myb and studied their effect on structure and function of the purified protein. Fluorescence emission spectra and fluorescence quenching experiments showed that the AMV-specific point mutations had a significant effect on the conformation of the DBD, giving rise to a more compact structure, a change that was accompanied by a reduced sensitivity toward cysteine-specific alkylation and oxidation. The DNA binding properties were also altered by the AMV-specific point mutations, leading to protein-DNA complexes with highly reduced stability. This reduction in stability was, however, more severe with certain subtypes of binding sequences than with others. This differential behavior was also observed in an in vivo model system where DBD-VP16 fusions were coexpressed with various reporters. These findings imply that different subsets of Myb-responsive promoters may react differentially toward the AMV-specific mutations, a phenomenon that could contribute to the altered patterns of gene expression induced by the AMV v-Myb relative to wild type c-Myb.

Highlights

  • Expressed in immature cells of all lineages, and the expression is strongly down-regulated during terminal differentiation

  • We show that the avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV)-specific mutations alter the conformation of the flexible R2-domain and that this change is accompanied by altered DNA binding properties, altered redox sensitivity, and altered transactivation in a model yeast effector-reporter system

  • Three subdomains were expressed in E. coli and purified, the chicken wild type R2R3 protein and two mutated R2R3-harboring mutations found in R2 of the AMV v-Myb protein

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Summary

Introduction

Expressed in immature cells of all lineages, and the expression is strongly down-regulated during terminal differentiation. Dini et al [24] found that AMV v-myb caused a 10-fold higher frequency of leukemic transformation of primary hematopoietic cells in culture than did a truncated c-myb without the mutations Mutations in both the DNA binding and the transactivation domains seemed to cooperate in attaining a high transformation frequency [24]. An alternative hypothesis suggested by some investigators has been that the mutations modify interactions between Myb and other regulatory proteins (see Thompson and Ramsay [2]) Indirect support for this hypothesis was the finding that all three amino acid replacements are exposed on the surface of the DNA binding domain as judged from its structure [14]. We demonstrate that the quantitative alterations in DNA binding is more severe with some recognition sequences than with others, suggesting that the altered DNA binding properties act differentially and could affect subsets of genes differently

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