6533b859fe1ef96bd12b76c6

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Sumoylation of the transcription factor NFATc1 leads to its subnuclear relocalization and interleukin-2 repression by histone deacetylase.

Martin VaethJulia SchumannTobias BoppArnab NayakEdgar SerflingMathias ButtmannEdgar SchmittFriederike Berberich-siebeltJudith Glöckner-pagel

subject

Gene isoformSUMO proteinBiologyBiochemistryHistone DeacetylasesCell LineMiceAnimalsHumansProtein IsoformsMolecular BiologyTranscription factorRegulation of gene expressionCell NucleusLymphokinesintegumentary systemNFATC Transcription FactorsActivator (genetics)Mechanisms of Signal TransductionNFATCell BiologyMolecular biologyChromatinHistoneGene Expression RegulationUbiquitin-Conjugating Enzymesbiology.proteinSmall Ubiquitin-Related Modifier ProteinsInterleukin-2Histone deacetylase

description

The family of NFAT (nuclear factor of activated T-cells) transcription factors plays an important role in cytokine gene regulation. In peripheral T-cells NFATc1 and -c2 are predominantly expressed. Because of different promoter and poly(A) site usage as well as alternative splicing events, NFATc1 is synthesized in multiple isoforms. The highly inducible NFATc1/A contains a relatively short C terminus, whereas the longer, constitutively expressed isoform NFATc1/C spans an extra C-terminal peptide of 246 amino acids. Interestingly, this NFATc1/C-specific terminus can be highly sumoylated. Upon sumoylation, NFATc1/C, but not the unsumoylated NFATc1/A, translocates to promyelocytic leukemia nuclear bodies. This leads to interaction with histone deacetylases followed by deacetylation of histones, which in turn induces transcriptionally inactive chromatin. As a consequence, expression of the NFATc1 target gene interleukin-2 is suppressed. These findings demonstrate that the modification by SUMO (small ubiquitin-like modifier) converts NFATc1 from an activator to a site-specific transcriptional repressor, revealing a novel regulatory mechanism for NFATc1 function.

10.1074/jbc.m900465200https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19218564