Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

    Oncogene. 1998 Nov 5;17(18):2279-85.

    Characterization of a carboxy-terminal BRCA1 interacting protein.

    Wong AK, Ormonde PA, Pero R, Chen Y, Lian L, Salada G, Berry S, Lawrence Q, Dayananth P, Ha P, Tavtigian SV, Teng DH, Bartel PL.

    Myriad Genetics, Inc., Salt Lake City, Utah 84108, USA.

    There are several lines of evidence indicating that the carboxy-terminal region of the tumor suppressor protein BRCA1 is a functionally significant domain. Using the yeast two-hybrid and in vitro biochemical assays, we show that a protein, CtIP, interacts specifically with the carboxy-terminal segment of human BRCA1 from residues 1602-1863. A germ line truncation mutation, Y1853ter, that removes the last 11 amino acids from the carboxy-terminus of BRCA1, abolishes not only its transcriptional activation function, but also binding to CtIP. The function of CtIP is unknown, but its reported association with a transcriptional repressor CtBP lends further support that it may have a role in transcription. A sequence based screen of a panel of 89 tumor cell line cDNAs for mutations in the CtIP coding region identified five missense variants. In the pancreatic carcinoma cell line, BxPC3, the non-conservative lysine to glutamic acid change at codon 337 is accompanied with apparent loss of heterozygosity or non-expression of the wild type allele. Thus it is plausible that CtIP may itself be a tumor suppressor acting in the same pathway as BRCA1.

    PMID: 9811458 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    Supplemental Content

    Click here to read