The cell-cycle regulator geminin inhibits Hox function through direct and polycomb-mediated interactions
- 1 February 2004
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 427 (6976), 749-753
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature02305
Abstract
Embryonic development is tightly controlled. The clustered genes of the Hox family of homeobox proteins play an important part in regulating this development and also proliferation. They specify embryonic structures along the body axis, and are associated with normal and malignant cell growth1,2,3,4. The cell-cycle regulator geminin controls replication by binding to the licensing factor Cdt1, and is involved in neural differentiation5,6,7. Here, we show that murine geminin associates transiently with members of the Hox-repressing polycomb complex, with the chromatin of Hox regulatory DNA elements and with Hox proteins. Gain- and loss-of-function experiments in the chick neural tube demonstrate that geminin modulates the anterior boundary of Hoxb9 transcription, which suggests a polycomb-like activity for geminin. The interaction between geminin and Hox proteins prevents Hox proteins from binding to DNA, inhibits Hox-dependent transcriptional activation of reporter and endogenous downstream target genes, and displaces Cdt1 from its complex with geminin. By establishing competitive regulation, geminin functions as a coordinator of developmental and proliferative control.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Direct interaction of geminin and Six3 in eye developmentNature, 2004
- Deregulated homeobox gene expression in cancer: cause or consequence?Nature Reviews Cancer, 2002
- Expression of Geminin as a Marker of Cell Proliferation in Normal Tissues and MalignanciesThe American Journal of Pathology, 2002
- Analysis of gene function in somatic mammalian cells using small interfering RNAsMethods, 2002
- Inhibition of Eukaryotic DNA Replication by Geminin Binding to Cdt1Science, 2000
- A novel member of murine Polycomb-group proteins, Sex comb on midleg homolog protein, is highly conserved, and interacts with RAE28/mph1 in vitroDifferentiation, 1999
- Vertebrate Hox genes and proliferation: an alternative pathway to homeosis?Current Opinion in Genetics & Development, 1995
- DNA Binding and Transcriptional Properties of Wild-Type and Mutant Forms of the Homeodomain Protein Msx2Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1995
- Hox genes in vertebrate developmentCell, 1994