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Molecular and Cellular Biology, November 1999, p. 7639-7650, Vol. 19, No. 11
Radiobiology Division, National Cancer Center
Research Institute, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-0045, Japan
Received 25 June 1999/Returned for modification 20 July
1999/Accepted 2 August 1999
The FUS (TLS)-ERG chimeric protein associated with
t(16;21)(p11;q22) acute myeloid leukemia is structurally similar to the Ewing's sarcoma chimeric transcription factor EWS-ERG. We found that
both FUS-ERG and EWS-ERG could induce anchorage-independent proliferation of the mouse fibroblast cell line NIH 3T3. However, only
FUS-ERG was able to inhibit the differentiation into neutrophils of a
mouse myeloid precursor cell line L-G and induce its granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-dependent growth. We constructed several deletion mutants of FUS-ERG lacking a part of the N-terminal FUS region. A deletion mutant lacking the region between amino acids 1 and
173 (exons 1 to 5) lost the NIH 3T3-transforming activity but retained
the L-G-transforming activity. On the other hand, a mutant lacking the
region between amino acids 174 and 265 (exons 6 and 7) lost the
L-G-transforming activity but retained the NIH 3T3-transforming
activity. These results indicate that the N-terminal region of FUS
contains two independent functional domains required for the NIH 3T3
and L-G transformation, which we named TR1 and TR2, respectively.
Although EWS intrinsically possessed the TR2 domain, the EWS-ERG
construct employed lacked the EWS sequence containing this domain.
Since the TR2 domain is always found in chimeric proteins identified
from t(16;21) leukemia patients but not in chimeric proteins from
Ewing's sarcoma patients, it seems that the TR2 function is required
only for the leukemogenic potential. In addition, we identified three
cellular genes whose expression was altered by ectopic expression of
FUS-ERG and found that these are regulated in either a TR1-dependent or
a TR2-dependent manner. These results suggest that FUS-ERG may activate
two independent oncogenic pathways during the leukemogenic process by
modulating the expression of two different groups of genes simultaneously.
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Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Dual Transforming Activities of the FUS (TLS)-ERG
Leukemia Fusion Protein Conferred by Two N-Terminal Domains of
FUS (TLS)
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Radiobiology
Division, National Cancer Center Research Institute, 5-1-1 Tsukiji,
Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-0045, Japan. Phone: 81-3-3542-2511, ext. 4754. Fax: 81-3-3542-0688. E-mail: hichikaw{at}ncc.go.jp.
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