PA2G4 (proliferation-associated 2G4, 38kDa)

2011-09-01   Anne Hamburger  , Arundhati Ghosh  , Smita Awasthi  

University of Maryland School of Medicine, Department of Pathology, University of Maryland Greenebaum Cancer Center, Baltimore, USA

Identity

HGNC
LOCATION
12q13.2
LOCUSID
ALIAS
EBP1,HG4-1,p38-2G4
FUSION GENES

DNA/RNA

Atlas Image
The alignment of PA2G4 mRNA to its genomic sequence.

Description

The PA2G4 gene contains 13 exons. The sizes of the exons 1-13 are 88, 128, 105, 69, 92, 63, 78, 78, 133, 94, 127, 53 and 65 bp (to the stop codon). Exon 1 contains the translation initiation ATG. Exon 13 contains the stop codon.

Transcription

The human PA2G4 promoter contains several putative transcription factor binding sites. The major transcript length is 2643 nt. Two proteins are translated due to alternative splicing (Liu et al., 2006). An alternatively spliced version missing 29 NT between the first and third ATGs has been observed.
The PA2G4 promoter contains two tandem DNA elements that bind E2F1. E2F1 increases endogenous EBP1 mRNA levels in cancer cells, but decreases EBP1 mRNA abundance in non transformed cells (Judah et al., 2010).

Pseudogene

Six pseudogenes, located on chromosomes 3, 6, 9, 18, 20 and X, have been identified.

Proteins

Atlas Image
The linear schematic of EBP1. Functional domains, including Nucleolar Localization Signal (NuLS), σ70 RNA binding region (σ70), amphipathic helical domain (AHD), LXXLL nuclear receptor binding motif (LX) and demonstrated in vivo phosphorylation sites (*).

Description

p38-2G4 was initially isolated as a DNA binding protein from mouse Ehrlich ascites cells (Radomski and Jost, 1995). The MW of this protein is predicted to be 38058 D, consisting of 340 amino acids. The human orthologue EBP1 was later identified as an ErbB3 binding protein of the same MW as the mouse protein (Yoo et al., 2000). This form migrates at approximately 42 kD in SDS-PAGE gels. Later, a larger 394 amino acid form (predicted MW 43787 D, migrating at 48 kD) was observed in mammalian cells (Xia et al., 2001). The two forms have been demonstrated to be the result of alternative splicing (Liu et al., 2006) or usage of alternative translation initiation sites (Xia et al., 2001). Amino acids 1-48 are required for nucleolar localization and the C terminal domain (aa 364-394) is required for interactions with nucleic acids (Moonie et al., 2007) and protein (Zhang et al., 2002).
EBP1 is post translationally modified at several phosphorylation sites (Ser 360 (Ahn et al., 2006), Ser 363 (Akinmade et al., 2007) and Thr 261 (Akinmade et al., 2008)) in vivo. The protein stability of the short form is regulated by ubiquitination (Liu et al., 2009). The short form is also sumoylated by the TLF/FUS E3 ligase and this sumoylation is required for the anti-proliferative effects of EBP1 (Oh et al., 2010).
The crystal structure of both murine (Monie et al., 2007) and human (Kowalinski et al., 2007) EBP1 has been solved. There is a core domain that is homologous to methionine aminopeptidases, although no enzymatic activity has been reported. The C terminal domain containing a Lys-rich nuclear hormone receptor binding motif (LKALL) was reported to mediate RNA binding (Monie et al., 2007).

Expression

EBP1 has been found to be ubiquitously expressed with high expression levels in skeletal muscle (Yoo et al., 2000).

Localisation

Under logarithmically growing conditions in cell culture, EBP1 localizes to the nucleolus and the cytoplasm (Xia et al., 2001; Squatrito et al., 2004). Upon stimulation with the ErbB3 ligand heregulin, the short form of EBP1 is recruited to the nucleus in AU565 breast cancer cells (Yoo et al., 2000). Sumoylation is required for nuclear translocation (Oh et al., 2010). In primary normal epithelial cells, EBP1 is confined to the cytoplasm (Zhang et al., 2008b).

Function

EBP1 was initially isolated as a cell cycle-regulated DNA binding protein (Radomski and Jost, 1995) and has been shown to induce cell cycle arrest in the G2/M phase of the cell cycle (Zhang et al., 2005). EBP1 acts as a corepressor for several proliferation-associated genes including Cyclin D1, E2F1 (Zhang and Hamburger, 2004) and the androgen receptor (Zhang et al., 2005). EBP1 inhibits transcription of these genes by recruiting HDAC2 via Sin3A to the E2F1 and AR-regulated promoters (Zhang et al., 2005). EBP1 interacts with RB1 and the interaction is enhanced upon EBP1 dephosphorylation (Xia et al., 2001).
EBP1 was isolated as an ErbB3 binding protein using a yeast-two hybrid screen (Yoo et al., 2000). The interactions of EBP1 with ErbB3 is disrupted by the ErbB3 ligand heregulin, leading to EBP1 nuclear translocation. This leads to the eventual inhibition of heregulin-stimulated proliferation, presumably due to the repression of proliferation associated genes (Zhang et al., 2008a).
EBP1 also binds RNA and associates with 28S, 18S and 5.8S mature rRNAs, several rRNA precursors and probably U3 small nucleolar RNA. It has been implicated in the regulation of intermediate and late steps of rRNA processing (Squatrito et al., 2004; Squatrito et al., 2006). EBP1 also mediates cap-independent translation of specific viral IRES (internal ribosome entry site) (Pilipenko et al., 2000). EBP1 regulates translation of AR mRNA (Zhou et al., 2010).
EBP1 has also been implicated in protein stability via its interaction with the proteasome. Overexpression of EBP1 results in decreased stability of ErbB2 protein in breast cancer cells via a proteasome-mediated pathway (Lu et al., 2011). The long form of EBP1 binds to the p53 E3 ligase HDM2, enhancing HDM2-p53 interactions and promoting p53 degradation (Kim et al., 2011).
The long (p48) and short (p42) forms of EBP1 have opposing biological effects, with the longer form inducing cell survival and the shorter form inhibiting cell growth (Liu et al., 2006). The long form binds HDM2, promoting degradation of p53 (Kim et al., 2010).

Homology

Similar (30% identity) to the 42 kDA DNA binding protein SF00553 in S. pombe yeast (Yamada et al., 1994) and StEBP1 in potato (Horvath et al., 2006). The orthologue in potatoes (StEBP1) has 69% sequence similarity to human EBP1 and can inhibit growth of human breast cancer cell lines and E2F1 expression in these cells.

Mutations

Germinal

No mutations in the PA2G4 gene have been reported.

Somatic

None reported.

Implicated in

Entity name
Prostate cancer
Prognosis
Decreased expression of EBP1 is associated with higher tumor grade and metastasis in prostate cancer (Zhang et al., 2008b). However, another study indicated EBP1 expression increased with disease progression (Gannon et al., 2008).
Entity name
Breast cancer
Prognosis
Deletion of EBP1 results in tamoxifen resistance in breast cancer (Zhang et al., 2008a). However, patients with a high level of EBP1 protein have a poor clinical outcome (Ou et al., 2006).
Entity name
Glioblastoma
Prognosis
Glioblastoma patients expressing a high level of p48 EBP1 have a worse prognosis than those expressing lower levels of the protein (Kim et al., 2010; Kwon and Ahn, 2011).

Article Bibliography

Pubmed IDLast YearTitleAuthors

Other Information

Locus ID:

NCBI: 5036
MIM: 602145
HGNC: 8550
Ensembl: ENSG00000170515

Variants:

dbSNP: 5036
ClinVar: 5036
TCGA: ENSG00000170515
COSMIC: PA2G4

RNA/Proteins

Gene IDTranscript IDUniprot
ENSG00000170515ENST00000303305Q9UQ80
ENSG00000170515ENST00000303305A0A024RB85
ENSG00000170515ENST00000551061F8VZ69
ENSG00000170515ENST00000552766F8VR77
ENSG00000170515ENST00000553057F8W0A3

Expression (GTEx)

0
50
100
150
200
250

Pathways

PathwaySourceExternal ID
Immune SystemREACTOMER-HSA-168256
Innate Immune SystemREACTOMER-HSA-168249
Neutrophil degranulationREACTOMER-HSA-6798695

Protein levels (Protein atlas)

Not detected
Low
Medium
High

References

Pubmed IDYearTitleCitations
388346132024Orthogonal proteogenomic analysis identifies the druggable PA2G4-MYC axis in 3q26 AML.0
388346132024Orthogonal proteogenomic analysis identifies the druggable PA2G4-MYC axis in 3q26 AML.0
364237782023Loci on chromosome 12q13.2 encompassing ERBB3, PA2G4 and RAB5B are associated with polycystic ovary syndrome.2
366063222023LINC00173 facilitates tumor progression by stimulating RAB1B-mediated PA2G4 and SDF4 secretion in nasopharyngeal carcinoma.3
364237782023Loci on chromosome 12q13.2 encompassing ERBB3, PA2G4 and RAB5B are associated with polycystic ovary syndrome.2
366063222023LINC00173 facilitates tumor progression by stimulating RAB1B-mediated PA2G4 and SDF4 secretion in nasopharyngeal carcinoma.3
331503742021Progression signature underlies clonal evolution and dissemination of multiple myeloma.20
332202872021Pseudogene PA2G4P4 promotes oncogene PA2G4 expression and nuclear translocation to affect glioblastoma cell viability and apoptosis.3
335292382021HER2-intronic miR-4728-5p facilitates HER2 expression and accelerates cell proliferation and migration by targeting EBP1 in breast cancer.3
336055742021Increased PA2G4 Expression Is an Unfavorable Factor in Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma.5
336349402021Ebp1 p48 promotes oncogenic properties in hepatocellular carcinoma through p38 MAPK/HIF1α activation and p53 downregulation.5
336919082021EBP1 regulates Suv39H1 stability via the ubiquitin-proteasome system in neural development.4
331503742021Progression signature underlies clonal evolution and dissemination of multiple myeloma.20
332202872021Pseudogene PA2G4P4 promotes oncogene PA2G4 expression and nuclear translocation to affect glioblastoma cell viability and apoptosis.3
335292382021HER2-intronic miR-4728-5p facilitates HER2 expression and accelerates cell proliferation and migration by targeting EBP1 in breast cancer.3

Citation

Anne Hamburger ; Arundhati Ghosh ; Smita Awasthi

PA2G4 (proliferation-associated 2G4, 38kDa)

Atlas Genet Cytogenet Oncol Haematol. 2011-09-01

Online version: http://atlasgeneticsoncology.org/gene/41628/meetings/js/css/template-card.css