Abstract

PQBP1 is a nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling protein that is engaged in RNA metabolism and transcription. In mouse embryonic brain, our previous in situ hybridization study revealed that PQBP1 mRNA was dominantly expressed in the periventricular zone region where neural stem progenitor cells (NSPCs) are located. Because the expression patterns in NSPCs are related to the symptoms of intellectual disability and microcephaly in PQBP1 gene-mutated patients, we investigated the transcriptional regulation of PQBP1 by NSPC-specific transcription factors. We selected 132 genome sequences that matched the consensus sequence for the binding of Sox2 and POU transcription factors upstream and downstream of the mouse PQBP1 gene. We then screened the binding affinity of these sequences to Sox2-Pax6 or Sox2-Brn2 with gel mobility shift assays and found 18 genome sequences that interacted with the NSPC-specific transcription factors. Some of these sequences had cis-regulatory activities in Luciferase assays and in utero electroporation into NSPCs. Furthermore we found decreased levels of expression of PQBP1 protein in NSPCs of heterozygous Sox2-knockout mice in vivo by immunohistochemistry and western blot analysis. Collectively, these results indicated that Sox2 regulated the transcription of PQBP1 in NSPCs.

Highlights

  • PQBP1 is a novel protein identified by yeast two-hybrid screening that binds to the polyglutamine tract sequence [1,2]

  • PQBP1 Protein is Highly Expressed in neural stem progenitor cells (NSPCs) We have previously shown with in situ hybridization that mouse

  • This finding reconfirmed the high levels of expression of PQBP1 in NSPCs that we found in our previous results

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Summary

Introduction

PQBP1 is a novel protein identified by yeast two-hybrid screening that binds to the polyglutamine (polyQ) tract sequence [1,2]. PolyQ sequence is shared by multiple transcription-related factors, such as TFIID/TATA-binding protein, androgen receptor, glucocorticoid receptor, octamer-binding factors, and CREBbinding factors, and by proteins related to a group of triplet-repeat diseases, which are called polyQ diseases, such asataxin-1, ataxin, atrophin-1/DRPLA protein, and huntingtin. These proteins belonging to the two groups were determined by putting the polyQ sequence into a BLAST search Our previous in situ hybridization study revealed that PQBP1mRNA is dominantly expressed in the periventricular zone region where neural stem progenitor cells (NSPCs)are located [12]

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