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  4. Multiprotein bridging factor-1 (MBF-1) is a cofactor for nuclear receptors that regulate lipid metabolism
 
research article

Multiprotein bridging factor-1 (MBF-1) is a cofactor for nuclear receptors that regulate lipid metabolism

Brendel, Carole
•
Gelman, Laurent
•
Auwerx, Johan  
2002
Molecular endocrinology (Baltimore, Md.)

Multiprotein bridging factor (MBF-1) is a cofactor that was first described for its capacity to modulate the activity of fushi tarazu factor 1, a nuclear receptor originally implicated in Drosophila development. Recently, it has been shown that human MBF-1 stimulates the transcriptional activity of steroidogenic factor 1, a human homolog of fushi tarazu factor 1, which is implicated in steroidogenesis. Here we show that this cofactor enhances the transcriptional activity of several nonsteroid nuclear receptors that are implicated in lipid metabolism, i.e. the liver receptor homolog 1, the liver X receptor alpha, and PPARgamma. MBF-1 interacts with distinct domains in these receptors, depending on whether the receptor binds DNA as a monomer or as a heterodimer with RXR. MBF-1 does not possess any of the classical histone modifying activities such as histone acetyl- or methyl transferase activities, linked to chromatin remodeling, but interacts in vitro with the transcription factor IID complex. MBF-1 seems therefore to act as a bridging factor enabling interactions of nuclear receptors with the transcription machinery.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1210/me.16.6.1367
PubMed ID

12040021

Author(s)
Brendel, Carole
Gelman, Laurent
Auwerx, Johan  
Date Issued

2002

Published in
Molecular endocrinology (Baltimore, Md.)
Volume

16

Issue

6

Start page

1367

End page

77

Subjects

Calmodulin-Binding Proteins

•

Drosophila Proteins

•

Lipid Metabolism

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LISP  
Available on Infoscience
April 2, 2009
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/36566
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