Nucleic Acids Res.

Two partial cDNAs coding for DNA-binding proteins (AT-BP1 and AT-BP2) have been isolated. Both proteins, when prepared from lambda gt11 lysogens, bind to the B-domain of the alpha 1-antitrypsin promoter, an element which is important for the liver-specific expression of alpha 1-antitrypsin. Analysis of the cDNA sequences encoding these proteins reveals that both contain two zinc fingers of the Cys2-His2 type followed by a highly acidic stretch of 20 amino acids. AT-BP1 contains a second putative DNA-binding domain consisting of an 8-fold repeat of a SPKK (Ser-Pro-Lys/Arg-Lys/Arg) motif. Both proteins bind to the NF-kappa B recognition site in the MHC gene enhancer with significantly higher affinity than to the kappa immunoglobulin gene enhancer, or to the B-domain of the alpha 1-antitrypsin gene promoter. Analysis of mRNA expression shows that AT-BP1 and AT-BP2 are expressed in all the tissues examined. While the physiological roles of AT-BP1 and AT-BP2 remain to be elucidated, their predicted amino acid sequence and their DNA-binding characteristics suggest a role as transcriptional regulators.

Source:http://purl.uniprot.org/citations/1901405

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Two partial cDNAs coding for DNA-binding proteins (AT-BP1 and AT-BP2) have been isolated. Both proteins, when prepared from lambda gt11 lysogens, bind to the B-domain of the alpha 1-antitrypsin promoter, an element which is important for the liver-specific expression of alpha 1-antitrypsin. Analysis of the cDNA sequences encoding these proteins reveals that both contain two zinc fingers of the Cys2-His2 type followed by a highly acidic stretch of 20 amino acids. AT-BP1 contains a second putative DNA-binding domain consisting of an 8-fold repeat of a SPKK (Ser-Pro-Lys/Arg-Lys/Arg) motif. Both proteins bind to the NF-kappa B recognition site in the MHC gene enhancer with significantly higher affinity than to the kappa immunoglobulin gene enhancer, or to the B-domain of the alpha 1-antitrypsin gene promoter. Analysis of mRNA expression shows that AT-BP1 and AT-BP2 are expressed in all the tissues examined. While the physiological roles of AT-BP1 and AT-BP2 remain to be elucidated, their predicted amino acid sequence and their DNA-binding characteristics suggest a role as transcriptional regulators.
skos:exactMatch
uniprot:name
Nucleic Acids Res.
uniprot:author
Cortese R., Mitchelmore C., Traboni C.
uniprot:date
1991
uniprot:pages
141-147
uniprot:title
Isolation of two cDNAs encoding zinc finger proteins which bind to the alpha 1-antitrypsin promoter and to the major histocompatibility complex class I enhancer.
uniprot:volume
19
dc-term:identifier
doi:10.1093/nar/19.1.141