Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1946315 Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Gene Regulatory Mechanisms 2016 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The PIAS1 protein causes activation or repression of c-Myb.•PIAS1 engages in a novel interaction with the coactivator p300.•c-Myb becomes activated by PIAS1 through enhanced p300 recruitment to chromatin.•SUMO-negative c-Myb is repressed by PIAS1 through reduced p300 recruitment.

The PIAS proteins (Protein Inhibitor of Activated STATs) constitute a family of multifunctional nuclear proteins operating as SUMO E3 ligases and being involved in a multitude of interactions. They participate in a range of biological processes, also beyond their well-established role in the immune system and cytokine signalling. They act both as transcriptional corepressors and coactivators depending on the context. In the present work, we investigated mechanisms by which PIAS1 causes activation or repression of c-Myb dependent target genes. Analysis of global expression data shows that c-Myb and PIAS1 knockdowns affect a subset of common targets, but with a dual outcome consistent with a role of PIAS1 as either a corepressor or coactivator. Our mechanistic studies show that PIAS1 engages in a novel interaction with the acetyltransferase and coactivator p300. Interaction and ChIP analysis suggest a bridging function where PIAS1 enhances p300 recruitment to c-Myb-bound sites through interaction with both proteins. In addition, the E3 activity of PIAS1 enhances further its coactivation. Remarkably, the SUMO status of c-Myb had a decisive role, indicating a SUMO-dependent switch in the way PIAS1 affects c-Myb, either as a coactivator or corepressor. Removal of the two major SUMO-conjugation sites in c-Myb (2KR mutant), which enhances its activity significantly, turned PIAS1 into a corepressor. Also, p300 was less efficiently recruited to chromatin by c-Myb-2KR. We propose that PIAS1 acts as a “protein inhibitor of activated c-Myb” in the absence of SUMOylation while, in its presence, PIAS behaves as a “protein activator of repressed c-Myb”.

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