N

Nobuo Horikoshi

The Wistar Institute

ORCID: 0000-0001-8464-8178

Publishes on DNA Repair Mechanisms, Cancer-related Molecular Pathways, Heat shock proteins research. 111 papers and 4.5k citations.

111Publications
4.5kTotal Citations

Is this you? Claim your profile.

Add your photo, update your bio, and get notified when your ranking changes.

Top publicationsby citations

Wild-type p53 binds to the TATA-binding protein and represses transcription.
Edward Seto, Anny Usheva, Gerard P. Zambetti et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1992
Cited by 520Open Access

p53 activates transcription of genes with a p53 response element, and it can repress genes lacking the element. Here we demonstrate that wild-type but not mutant p53 inhibits transcription in a HeLa nuclear extract from minimal promoters. Wild-type but not mutant p53 binds to human TATA-binding protein (TBP). p53 does not bind to yeast TBP, and it cannot inhibit transcription in a HeLa extract where yeast TBP substitutes for human TBP. These results suggest a model in which p53 binds to TBP and interferes with transcriptional initiation.

Blockage by Adenovirus E4orf6 of Transcriptional Activation by the p53 Tumor Suppressor
Cited by 312

The adenovirus E4orf6 protein is shown here to interact with the cellular tumor suppressor protein p53 and to block p53-mediated transcriptional activation. The adenovirus protein inhibited the ability of p53 to bind to human TAFII31, a component of transcription factor IID (TFIID). Earlier work demonstrated that the interaction of p53 with TAFII31 involves a sequence near the NH2-terminus of p53, whereas the E4orf6-p53 interaction occurs within amino acids 318 to 360 of p53. Thus, the E4orf6 protein interacts at a site on p53 distinct from the domain that binds to TAFII31 but nevertheless inhibits the p53-TAFII31 interaction.

Direct interaction between adenovirus E1A protein and the TATA box binding transcription factor IID.
Nobuo Horikoshi, K Maguire, Anastasia Kralli et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1991
Cited by 242Open Access

Adenovirus E1A has long been known to activate/repress cellular and viral transcription. The transcriptional activity of nuclear extracts was depleted after chromatography on immobilized E1A protein columns that specifically retained the transcription factor (TF) IID. Stronger direct interactions between E1A and human TFIID than between E1A and yeast TFIID suggest that the unique sequences of the human protein may be involved. We have demonstrated that this interaction occurs directly between bacterially produced E1A and bacterially produced human TFIID in a protein blot assay. We propose that E1A protein may transduce regulatory signals from upstream activators to basal elements of the transcriptional machinery by contacting TFIID.

Two Domains of p53 Interact with the TATA-Binding Protein, and the Adenovirus 13S E1A Protein Disrupts the Association, Relieving p53-Mediated Transcriptional Repression
Nobuo Horikoshi, Anny Usheva, Jiandong Chen et al.|Molecular and Cellular Biology|1995
Cited by 182Open Access

The tumor suppressor gene product p53 can activate and repress transcription. Both transcriptional activation and repression are thought to involve the direct interaction of p53 with the basal transcriptional machinery. Previous work has demonstrated an in vitro interaction between p53 and the TATA-binding protein that requires amino acids 20 to 57 of p53 and amino acids 220 to 271 of the TATA-binding protein. The present results show that a 75-amino-acid segment from the carboxy terminus of p53 also can bind to the TATA-binding protein in vitro, and this interaction requires amino acids 217 to 268 of the TATA-binding protein, essentially the same domain that is required for interaction with the amino-terminal domain of p53. A carboxy-terminal segment of p53 can mediate repression when bound to DNA as a GAL4-p53 fusion protein. The amino- and carboxy-terminal p53 interactions occur within the domain on the TATA-binding protein to which the adenovirus 13S E1A oncoprotein has previously been shown to bind. The 13S E1A oncoprotein can dissociate the complex formed between the carboxy-terminal domain of p53 and the TATA-binding protein and relieve p53-mediated transcriptional repression. These results demonstrate that two independent domains of p53 can potentially interact with the TATA-binding protein, and they define a mechanism--relief of repression--by which the 13S E1A oncoprotein can activate transcription through the TATA motif.