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F-box protein 15

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
FBXO15
Identifiers
AliasesFBXO15, FBX15, F-box protein 15, Fbx15
External IDsOMIM: 609093; MGI: 1354755; HomoloGene: 17644; GeneCards: FBXO15; OMA:FBXO15 - orthologs
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez
Ensembl
UniProt
RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_001142958
NM_152676

NM_015798
NM_001367965

RefSeq (protein)

NP_001136430
NP_689889
NP_689889.1

NP_056613

Location (UCSC)Chr 18: 74.07 – 74.15 MbChr 18: 84.95 – 85 Mb
PubMed search[3][4]
Wikidata
View/Edit HumanView/Edit Mouse

F-box protein 15 also known as Fbx15 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the FBXO15 gene.[5]

Function

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Members of the F-box protein family, such as FBXO15, are characterized by an approximately 40-amino acid F-box motif. SCF complexes, formed by SKP1, cullin, and F-box proteins, act as protein-ubiquitin ligases. F-box proteins interact with SKP1 through the F box, and they interact with ubiquitination targets through other protein interaction domains.[6]

Biochemically, Fbx15 is a substrate receptor of an ubiquitin ligase belonging to the family of the F-box proteins. Differently from other F-box proteins, Fbx15 recognizes its substrate Kif1-Binding Protein (KBP) in an acetylation dependent manner.[7]

Importance in embryonic stem cells

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Fbxo15 is a protein expressed in undifferentiated embryonic stem cells.

It is expressed during coexpression of Oct3/4, c-Myc, Klf4, and SOX2, four genes identified to be important in embryonic stem cell self-renewal and differentiation repression.[8]

In mice having a beta-galactosidase gene knocked into the Fbx15 locus, stain was detected in ES cells, early embryos (from two-cell to blastocyst stages), and testis tissue. There is an enhancer site upstream of the Fbx15-encoding transcription gene that contains an octamer-like binding motif and a Sox-like binding motif. Reporter gene analyses demonstrated that the ES cell-specific expression required this 18-bp enhancer element located approximately 500 nucleotides upstream from the transcription initiation site. Deletion or point mutation of either motif abolished the enhancer activity. It became active in NIH 3T3 cells when Oct3/4 and Sox2 were coexpressed and cooperatively bind to the enhancer sequence.

Targeted deletion of the Fbx15 gene in mice does not result in embryonic lethality or gross developmental aberrations, despite the fact that Fbx15-/- mice are sub-fertile when compared to their wild-type counterparts. This might be explained by the fact that Fbx15-/- embryonic stem cells display a proliferation defect - caused by the accumulation of the Fbx15 substrate KBP - generating a short-term bottleneck during the early stages of embryogenesis. In fact, targeting of KBP is required to prevent an unscheduled mitochondrial biogenesis that, in naïve pluripotent stem cells, causes increased mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation and production of reactive oxygen species.[7]

The selective expression of Fbx15 and its dependency on the activity of the pluripotency core factors Oct3/4 and Sox2 promoted the use of the expression of Fbx15 as the first marker of reprogramming of fibroblasts into induced pluripotent stem cells.

References

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  1. ^ a b c GRCh38: Ensembl release 89: ENSG00000141665Ensembl, May 2017
  2. ^ a b c GRCm38: Ensembl release 89: ENSMUSG00000034391Ensembl, May 2017
  3. ^ "Human PubMed Reference:". National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine.
  4. ^ "Mouse PubMed Reference:". National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine.
  5. ^ "Entrez Gene: F-box protein 15".
  6. ^ Jin J, Cardozo T, Lovering RC, Elledge SJ, Pagano M, Harper JW (November 2004). "Systematic analysis and nomenclature of mammalian F-box proteins". Genes & Development. 18 (21): 2573–80. doi:10.1101/gad.1255304. PMC 525538. PMID 15520277.
  7. ^ a b Donato V, Bonora M, Simoneschi D, Sartini D, Kudo Y, Saraf A, Florens L, Washburn MP, Stadtfeld M, Pinton P, Pagano M (April 2017). "The TDH-GCN5L1-Fbxo15-KBP axis limits mitochondrial biogenesis in mouse embryonic stem cells". Nature Cell Biology. 19 (4): 341–351. doi:10.1038/ncb3491. PMC 5376241. PMID 28319092.
  8. ^ Takahashi K, Yamanaka S (August 2006). "Induction of pluripotent stem cells from mouse embryonic and adult fibroblast cultures by defined factors". Cell. 126 (4): 663–76. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2006.07.024. hdl:2433/159777. PMID 16904174. S2CID 1565219.

This article incorporates text from the United States National Library of Medicine, which is in the public domain.