CDK9 has been recently shown to have increased kinase activity in differentiated cells in culture and a differentiated tissue-specific expression in the developing mouse. In order to identify factors that contribute to CDK9's differentiation-specific function, we screened a mouse embryonic library in the yeast two-hybrid system and found a tumor necrosis factor signal transducer, TRAF2, to be an interacting protein. CDK9 interacts with a conserved domain in the TRAF-C region of TRAF2, a motif that is known to bind other kinases involved in TRAF-mediated signaling. Endogenous interaction between the two proteins appears to be specific to differentiated tissue. TRAF2-mediated signaling may incorporate additional kinases to signal cell survival in myotubes, a cell type that is severely affected in TRAF2 knockout mice. (C) 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Binding of CDK9 to TRAF2 / Timothy K., Maclachlan; Nianli, Sang; Antonio De, Luca; Pier Lorenzo, Puri; Levrero, Massimo; Antonio, Giordano. - In: JOURNAL OF CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0730-2312. - 71:4(1998), pp. 467-478. [10.1002/(sici)1097-4644(19981215)71:4<467::aid-jcb2>3.0.co;2-g]
Binding of CDK9 to TRAF2
LEVRERO, Massimo;
1998
Abstract
CDK9 has been recently shown to have increased kinase activity in differentiated cells in culture and a differentiated tissue-specific expression in the developing mouse. In order to identify factors that contribute to CDK9's differentiation-specific function, we screened a mouse embryonic library in the yeast two-hybrid system and found a tumor necrosis factor signal transducer, TRAF2, to be an interacting protein. CDK9 interacts with a conserved domain in the TRAF-C region of TRAF2, a motif that is known to bind other kinases involved in TRAF-mediated signaling. Endogenous interaction between the two proteins appears to be specific to differentiated tissue. TRAF2-mediated signaling may incorporate additional kinases to signal cell survival in myotubes, a cell type that is severely affected in TRAF2 knockout mice. (C) 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.