Awardee OrganizationBOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
Description
Abstract Text
The Re1/-NF-KB family of transcription factors controls the growth
and differentiation of vertebrate lymphoid cells, and mutant re1
genes have been associated with a number of lymphoid cancers in
animals and humans. This work has had a continuing focus on
understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which Re1
transcription factors affect cell growth. In particular, the
mechanism by which the v-Re1 oncoprotein of the avian Rev-T
retrovirus induces malignant transformation and immortalization of
avian lymphoid cells, and by which v-Re1 is toxic in mammalian
cells will be investigated. Specifically, the following aims will
be accomplished: a chicken re1B cDNA will be isolated and the
ability of Re1B to interact with v-Re1 will be assessed; cDNAs
encoding proteins that can interact with and modulate the
activities to C-terminal sequences of v-Re1 will be identified and
characterized; the effect of anti-apoptosis proteins on
immortalization of cells by v-Re1 will be determined; the ability
of v-Re1 mutants to induce toxicity in mammalian fibroblasts will
be determined; as says will be developed to study the malignant
transforming potential of other avian and mammalian Re1 proteins in
avian and mammalian cells; and cellular genes whose expression is
commonly altered in Re1-transformed cells will be identified.
Furthermore, the mechanism by which certain Del proteins activate
transcription will be investigated by determining what types of
general transcription factors (such as transcriptional adapters)
are needed for transcriptional activation by v-Re1, c-Re1, Re1A,
and p85, an oncogenic form of NF-KB p100 found in HUT78 human
leukemia cells. Together, these experiments will serve as models
for understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying the
development of a subset of human lymphoid malignancies.
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