Human Interaction Network Ontology

Last uploaded: June 27, 2014
Preferred Name

Activation of the AP-1 family of transcription factors
Synonyms
Definitions

Edited: Shamovsky, V, 2010-02-27 Reviewed: Gillespie, ME, 2010-02-27 Activator protein-1 (AP-1) is a collective term referring to a group of transcription factors that bind to promoters of target genes in a sequence-specific manner. AP-1 family consists of hetero- and homodimers of bZIP (basic region leucine zipper) proteins, mainly of Jun-Jun, Jun-Fos or Jun-ATF. <p>AP-1 members are involved in the regulation of a number of cellular processes including cell growth, proliferation, survival, apoptosis, differentiation, cell migration. The ability of a single transcription factor to determine a cell fate critically depends on the relative abundance of AP-1 subunits, the composition of AP-1 dimers, the quality of stimulus, the cell type, the co-factor assembly. </p><p>AP-1 activity is regulated on multiple levels; transcriptional, translational and post-translational control mechanisms contribute to the balanced production of AP-1 proteins and their functions. Briefly, regulation occurs through:<ol><li>effects on jun, fos, atf gene transcription and mRNA turnover.<li> AP-1 protein members turnover. <li>post-translational modifications of AP-1 proteins that modulate their transactivation potential (effect of protein kinases or phosphatases).<li>interactions with other transcription factors that can either induce or interfere with AP-1 activity.</ol> Authored: Shamovsky, V, 2009-12-16

ID

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0015716

comment

Edited: Shamovsky, V, 2010-02-27

Reviewed: Gillespie, ME, 2010-02-27

Activator protein-1 (AP-1) is a collective term referring to a group of transcription factors that bind to promoters of target genes in a sequence-specific manner. AP-1 family consists of hetero- and homodimers of bZIP (basic region leucine zipper) proteins, mainly of Jun-Jun, Jun-Fos or Jun-ATF.

AP-1 members are involved in the regulation of a number of cellular processes including cell growth, proliferation, survival, apoptosis, differentiation, cell migration. The ability of a single transcription factor to determine a cell fate critically depends on the relative abundance of AP-1 subunits, the composition of AP-1 dimers, the quality of stimulus, the cell type, the co-factor assembly.

AP-1 activity is regulated on multiple levels; transcriptional, translational and post-translational control mechanisms contribute to the balanced production of AP-1 proteins and their functions. Briefly, regulation occurs through:

  1. effects on jun, fos, atf gene transcription and mRNA turnover.
  2. AP-1 protein members turnover.
  3. post-translational modifications of AP-1 proteins that modulate their transactivation potential (effect of protein kinases or phosphatases).
  4. interactions with other transcription factors that can either induce or interfere with AP-1 activity.

Authored: Shamovsky, V, 2009-12-16

definition source

Reactome, http://www.reactome.org

Pubmed15564374

Pubmed9069263

Pubmed7622446

Pubmed19167516

label

Activation of the AP-1 family of transcription factors

located_in

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/NCBITaxon_9606

prefixIRI

HINO:0015716

prefLabel

Activation of the AP-1 family of transcription factors

seeAlso

GENE ONTOLOGYGO:0051090

Reactome Database ID Release 43450341

ReactomeREACT_21326

subClassOf

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/INO_0000021

has_part

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0026378

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0026382

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0026380

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0026383

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0026384

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http://scai.fraunhofer.de/PWDICT#ID1626 PTS LOOM