Autoregulatory control of E2F1 expression in response to positive and negative regulators of cell cycle progression.
Open Access
- 1 July 1994
- journal article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Genes & Development
- Vol. 8 (13) , 1514-1525
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.8.13.1514
Abstract
Both positive and negative signals govern the progression of cells from G1 into S phase, and a variety of data implicate the E2F transcription factor as a target for the action of one class of negative regulators, the Rb family of growth suppressors. We now find that the E2F1 gene, which encodes one of the components of E2F activity, is subject to autoregulatory control during progression from G0 to S phase and that this primarily reflects a negative control in G0 and early G1, a time when the majority of E2F activity exits as a complex with Rb family members. In addition, we find that deregulated expression of G1 cyclins in quiescent cells stimulates the E2F1 promoter and that this is augmented by coexpression of cyclin-dependent kinases in an E2F-dependent manner. We conclude that the E2F1 gene is a downstream target for G1 cyclin-dependent kinase activity, most likely as a consequence of phosphorylation of Rb family members, and that the autoregulation of E2F1 transcription may provide a sensitive switch for regulating the accumulation of E2F activity during the transition from G1 to S phase.Keywords
This publication has 54 references indexed in Scilit:
- Negative Regulation of G1 in Mammalian Cells: Inhibition of Cyclin E-Dependent Kinase by TGF-βScience, 1993
- Retinoblastoma protein switches the E2F site from positive to negative elementNature, 1992
- Identification of a growth suppression domain within the retinoblastoma gene product.Genes & Development, 1992
- The interaction of RB with E2F coincides with an inhibition of the transcriptional activity of E2F.Genes & Development, 1992
- Control of DNA synthesis genes in fission yeast by the cell-cycle gene cdclO+Nature, 1992
- Isolation of the human cdk2 gene that encodes the cyclin A- and adenovirus E1A-associated p33 kinaseNature, 1991
- Domains of the adenovirus E1A protein required for oncogenic activity are also required for dissociation of E2F transcription factor complexes.Genes & Development, 1991
- The retinoblastoma protein copurifies with E2F-I, an E1A-regulated inhibitor of the transcription factor E2FCell, 1991
- Adenovirus E1A proteins can dissociate heteromeric complexes involving the E2F transcription factor: A novel mechanism for E1A trans-activationCell, 1990
- The retinoblastoma susceptibility gene product undergoes cell cycle-dependent dephosphorylation and binding to and release from SV40 large TCell, 1990