The Ski oncoprotein interacts with the Smad proteins to repress TGFbeta signaling

Kunxin Luo(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Shannon L. Stroschein(University of California, Berkeley), Weiru Wang(University of California, Berkeley), David Y. Chen(University of California, Berkeley), Eric Martens(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), S. Zhou(University of California, Berkeley), Qiang Zhou(University of California, Berkeley)
Genes & Development
September 1, 1999
Cited by 468Open Access
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Abstract

Smad proteins are critical signal transducers downstream of the receptors of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGFbeta) superfamily. On phosphorylation and activation by the active TGFbeta receptor complex, Smad2 and Smad3 form hetero-oligomers with Smad4 and translocate into the nucleus, where they interact with different cellular partners, bind to DNA, regulate transcription of various downstream response genes, and cross-talk with other signaling pathways. Here we show that a nuclear oncoprotein, Ski, can interact directly with Smad2, Smad3, and Smad4 on a TGFbeta-responsive promoter element and repress their abilities to activate transcription through recruitment of the nuclear transcriptional corepressor N-CoR and possibly its associated histone deacetylase complex. Overexpression of Ski in a TGFbeta-responsive cell line renders it resistant to TGFbeta-induced growth inhibition and defective in activation of JunB expression. This ability to overcome TGFbeta-induced growth arrest may be responsible for the transforming activity of Ski in human and avian cancer cells. Our studies suggest a new paradigm for inactivation of the Smad proteins by an oncoprotein through transcriptional repression.


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