pubmed-article:9105675 | pubmed:abstractText | The class III POU proteins are expressed throughout the central nervous system, including the hypothalamus, where they are often co-localized. Presumably, these POU proteins (Brain-1, Brain-2, Brain-4 and SCIP) serve as transcriptional transactivators. That they are co-expressed in some neurons suggests that, if they were to form homomeric and heteromeric complexes with each other, depending on the particular combination, they might have different DNA-binding specificities and, thus, activate different genes. We used purified fusion proteins of the four class III POU proteins in far-western assays to show that the proteins can interact. We confirmed their interactions using a two-hybrid system. Both techniques indicate that the interaction occurs through the POU domain. The far-western technique also allowed us to identify a 120-kDa nuclear protein that interacts with Brain-4. Subsequent affinity purification and microsequencing identified the protein as the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein U (hnRNP U). This result suggests another mechanism by which a POU protein can influence gene expression: by facilitating the processing of pre-mRNA whose transcription it has stimulated. | lld:pubmed |