Role of pRB-family/E2F complex in the inhibition of IL-3-dependent lymphoid cell proliferation.

2002 
Abstract Interleukin 3 (IL-3)-dependent proliferation of haematopoietic cells is specifically inhibited by p130, a member of the pRB-family proteins. p130 interacts with the cell-cycle regulatory E2F transcription factors, notably E2F-4 and E2F-5, and affects promoters containing E2F-binding sites through two distinct mechanisms. First, upon complex formation with E2F, it blocks transcriptional activation by E2F. Second, the formed p130-E2F complex binds to E2F sites and actively represses transcription by inhibiting the activity of surrounding enhancer elements on the promoter. To pursue the relative contributions of each mechanism in the p130-mediated inhibition of IL-3-dependent cell proliferation, we employed a dominant-negative DP-1, which suppresses both E2F-dependent transactivation and the formation of active transcriptional repressors. Ectopic expression of the dominant negative DP-1 in the IL-3-dependent BaF3 lymphoid cells gave rise to an inhibition of cell proliferation, which was concomitantly associated with a decrease in levels of cyclin E, an indispensable molecule for G1 to S-phase cell-cycle progression. Our results indicate that blocking E2F-dependent transactivation, but not the formation of p130-E2F transcriptional repressor complexes, is responsible for the inhibition of IL-3-dependent cell growth by p130.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    26
    References
    3
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []