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In Vitro | Journal Article

Transcriptional activation by the parvoviral nonstructural protein NS-1 is mediated via a direct interaction with Sp1.

J K Krady, D C Ward
J K Krady
Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510.
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D C Ward
Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510.
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DOI: 10.1128/MCB.15.1.524
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ABSTRACT

The nonstructural protein NS-1, encoded by the parvovirus minute virus of mice, is a potent regulator of viral gene expression. NS-1 does not bind DNA in a sequence-specific manner, and the mechanism by which it modulates viral promoter function is unclear. We have used Gal4-NS-1 fusion protein constructs to identify and characterize an activating domain encoded within the C-terminal 88 amino acids of NS-1 which competes effectively with the acidic activator domain of the herpes simplex virus VP16 protein. DNA affinity chromatography and immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrate that protein-protein interactions between the transcription factor Sp1 and NS-1 are required to bind NS-1 to promoter DNA in vitro. Cotransfection of Gal4-NS-1 and Sp1-VP16 acidic activator constructs into Drosophila melanogaster Schneider cells, which lack endogenous Sp1, stimulates transcription from a minimal promoter containing five Gal4 binding sites, while single-construct transfections do not. Cotransfection of Schneider cells with wild-type NS-1 and Sp1 constructs activates transcription from a simian virus 40 promoter 10- to 30-fold over that of either construct alone. Thus, Sp1-NS-1 interactions in vivo can stimulate transcription from a heterologous promoter containing Sp1 binding sites.

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Transcriptional activation by the parvoviral nonstructural protein NS-1 is mediated via a direct interaction with Sp1.
J K Krady, D C Ward
Molecular and Cellular Biology Jan 1995, 15 (1) 524-533; DOI: 10.1128/MCB.15.1.524

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Transcriptional activation by the parvoviral nonstructural protein NS-1 is mediated via a direct interaction with Sp1.
J K Krady, D C Ward
Molecular and Cellular Biology Jan 1995, 15 (1) 524-533; DOI: 10.1128/MCB.15.1.524
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