Interferon Regulatory Factor 2 Binding Protein 2 Is a New NFAT1 Partner and Represses Its Transcriptional Activity
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Abstract
The nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) family of transcription factors is expressed in a wide range
of cell types and regulates genes involved in cell cycle, differentiation, and apoptosis. NFAT proteins share two
well-conserved regions, the regulatory domain and the DNA binding domain. The N- and C-terminal ends are
transactivation sites and show less sequence similarity, whereas their molecular functions remain poorly
understood. Here, we identified a transcriptional repressor, interferon regulatory factor 2 binding protein 2
(IRF-2BP2), which specifically interacts with the C-terminal domain of NFAT1 among the NFAT family
members. IRF-2BP2 was described as a corepressor by inhibiting both enhancer-activated and basal tran scription. Gene reporter assays demonstrated that IRF-2BP2 represses the NFAT1-dependent transactivation
of NFAT-responsive promoters. The ectopic expression of IRF-2BP2 in CD4 T cells resulted in decreased
interleukin-2 (IL-2) and IL-4 production, supporting a repressive function of IRF-2BP2 for NFAT target genes.
Furthermore, NFAT1 and IRF-2BP2 colocalized in the nucleus in activated cells, and the mutation of a newly
identified nuclear localization signal in the IRF-2BP2 rendered it cytoplasmic, abolishing its repressive effect
on NFAT1 activity. Collectively, our data demonstrate that IRF-2BP2 is a negative regulator of the NFAT1
transcription factor and suggest that NFAT1 repression occurs at the transcriptional level.