Abstract
The zinc finger protein RE-1 silencing transcription factor (REST) is a transcriptional repressor that represses neuronal genes in non-neuronal tissues. A neuronal splice form of REST, termed REST4, has been described in the rat. It encompasses the N-terminus of REST, including the N-terminal repressor domain and five of the eight zinc fingers of the DNA-binding domain. The biological function of REST4 is controversial. Transcriptional repression as well as transcriptional de-repression activity has been attributed to the REST4 protein of rat. Here, we have expressed a ‘humanized’ version of REST4 (hREST4) to facilitate a comparison of the biological functions of hREST4 and REST. The biological activity the human REST protein has been extensively studied in the past. Additionally, hREST4 has a high degree of homology with the REST4 protein of rat. An immunofluorescence analysis showed that hREST4 is expressed in the nucleus, indicating that the protein may have a potential impact on gene regulation. We analyzed the biological function of hREST4 in NS20Y neuroblastoma cells using human synapsin I promoter/reporter gene constructs. The human synapsin I gene is negatively regulated by REST. The results show that hREST4, in contrast to the full-length human REST protein, does not impair human synapsin I promoter activity. Moreover, co-transfection experiments with expression vectors encoding REST and hREST4 did not reveal any evidence that REST4 blocks the transcriptional repression activity of REST.
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