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Soluble syntaxin 3 functions as a transcriptional regulator.

The Journal of biological chemistry (2018-02-25)
Adrian J Giovannone, Christine Winterstein, Pallavi Bhattaram, Elena Reales, Seng Hui Low, Julie E Baggs, Mimi Xu, Matthew A Lalli, John B Hogenesch, Thomas Weimbs
RESUMEN

Syntaxins are a conserved family of SNARE proteins and contain C-terminal transmembrane anchors required for their membrane fusion activity. Here we show that Stx3 (syntaxin 3) unexpectedly also functions as a nuclear regulator of gene expression. We found that alternative splicing creates a soluble isoform that we termed Stx3S, lacking the transmembrane anchor. Soluble Stx3S binds to the nuclear import factor RanBP5 (RAN-binding protein 5), targets to the nucleus, and interacts physically and functionally with several transcription factors, including ETV4 (ETS variant 4) and ATF2 (activating transcription factor 2). Stx3S is differentially expressed in normal human tissues, during epithelial cell polarization, and in breast cancer versus normal breast tissue. Inhibition of endogenous Stx3S expression alters the expression of cancer-associated genes and promotes cell proliferation. Similar nuclear-targeted, soluble forms of other syntaxins were identified, suggesting that nuclear signaling is a conserved, novel function common among these membrane-trafficking proteins.

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Anti-Syntaxin-3 Antibody, clone 1-146, clone 1-146, from mouse