The anti-proliferative activity of BTG/TOB proteins is mediated via the Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylase enzymes

The human BTG/TOB protein family comprises six members (BTG1, BTG2/PC3/Tis21, BTG3/Ana, BTG4/PC3B, TOB1/Tob, and TOB2) that display anti-proliferative activity in a number of cell types. They are characterised by a conserved N-terminal BTG domain that mediates interactions with the Caf1a (CNOT7) and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Doidge, Rachel L.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2013
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13012/
_version_ 1848791630019035136
author Doidge, Rachel L.
author_facet Doidge, Rachel L.
author_sort Doidge, Rachel L.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The human BTG/TOB protein family comprises six members (BTG1, BTG2/PC3/Tis21, BTG3/Ana, BTG4/PC3B, TOB1/Tob, and TOB2) that display anti-proliferative activity in a number of cell types. They are characterised by a conserved N-terminal BTG domain that mediates interactions with the Caf1a (CNOT7) and Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylases. It was unclear whether the anti-proliferative activity of the BTG/TOB proteins was mediated through interactions with Caf1a (CNOT7) and Caf1b (CNOT8). To address this we further characterised the amino acid residues located along the BTG2 and TOB1 interaction surface with Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8) to identify residues required for the interaction. We then analysed the role of BTG2 and TOB1 in the regulation of cell proliferation, translation and mRNA abundance using a mutant that is no longer able to interact with Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8). We conclude that the anti-proliferative activity of BTG/TOB proteins is mediated through interactions with the Caf1a (CNOT7) and Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylase enzymes. We also demonstrate that recruitment of BTG2 and TOB1 to mRNA leads to reduced protein levels and mRNA degradation. Furthermore, we show that the regulation of mRNA abundance and protein levels is dependent on Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8), but does not appear to require other Ccr4-Not components, including the Ccr4a (CNOT6)/Ccr4b (CNOT6L) deadenylases, or the non-catalytic subunits CNOT1 or CNOT3.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:31:33Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-13012
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:31:33Z
publishDate 2013
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-130122025-02-28T11:22:37Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13012/ The anti-proliferative activity of BTG/TOB proteins is mediated via the Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylase enzymes Doidge, Rachel L. The human BTG/TOB protein family comprises six members (BTG1, BTG2/PC3/Tis21, BTG3/Ana, BTG4/PC3B, TOB1/Tob, and TOB2) that display anti-proliferative activity in a number of cell types. They are characterised by a conserved N-terminal BTG domain that mediates interactions with the Caf1a (CNOT7) and Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylases. It was unclear whether the anti-proliferative activity of the BTG/TOB proteins was mediated through interactions with Caf1a (CNOT7) and Caf1b (CNOT8). To address this we further characterised the amino acid residues located along the BTG2 and TOB1 interaction surface with Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8) to identify residues required for the interaction. We then analysed the role of BTG2 and TOB1 in the regulation of cell proliferation, translation and mRNA abundance using a mutant that is no longer able to interact with Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8). We conclude that the anti-proliferative activity of BTG/TOB proteins is mediated through interactions with the Caf1a (CNOT7) and Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylase enzymes. We also demonstrate that recruitment of BTG2 and TOB1 to mRNA leads to reduced protein levels and mRNA degradation. Furthermore, we show that the regulation of mRNA abundance and protein levels is dependent on Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8), but does not appear to require other Ccr4-Not components, including the Ccr4a (CNOT6)/Ccr4b (CNOT6L) deadenylases, or the non-catalytic subunits CNOT1 or CNOT3. 2013-07-10 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13012/1/Thesis_FINAL_corrected.pdf Doidge, Rachel L. (2013) The anti-proliferative activity of BTG/TOB proteins is mediated via the Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylase enzymes. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
spellingShingle Doidge, Rachel L.
The anti-proliferative activity of BTG/TOB proteins is mediated via the Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylase enzymes
title The anti-proliferative activity of BTG/TOB proteins is mediated via the Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylase enzymes
title_full The anti-proliferative activity of BTG/TOB proteins is mediated via the Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylase enzymes
title_fullStr The anti-proliferative activity of BTG/TOB proteins is mediated via the Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylase enzymes
title_full_unstemmed The anti-proliferative activity of BTG/TOB proteins is mediated via the Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylase enzymes
title_short The anti-proliferative activity of BTG/TOB proteins is mediated via the Caf1a (CNOT7)/Caf1b (CNOT8) deadenylase enzymes
title_sort anti-proliferative activity of btg/tob proteins is mediated via the caf1a (cnot7)/caf1b (cnot8) deadenylase enzymes
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13012/