SP100
Domain
The HSR domain is important for the nuclear body targeting as well as for the dimerization.
Contains one Pro-Xaa-Val-Xaa-Leu (PxVxL) motif, which is required for interaction with chromoshadow domains. This motif requires additional residues -7, -6, +4 and +5 of the central Val which contact the chromoshadow domain.
Function
Together with PML, this tumor suppressor is a major constituent of the PML bodies, a subnuclear organelle involved in a large number of physiological processes including cell growth, differentiation and apoptosis. Functions as a transcriptional coactivator of ETS1 and ETS2 according to PubMed:11909962. Under certain conditions, it may also act as a corepressor of ETS1 preventing its binding to DNA according to PubMed:15247905. Through the regulation of ETS1 it may play a role in angiogenesis, controlling endothelial cell motility and invasion. Through interaction with the MRN complex it may be involved in the regulation of telomeres lengthening. May also regulate TP53-mediated transcription and through CASP8AP2, regulate FAS-mediated apoptosis. Also plays a role in infection by viruses, including human cytomegalovirus and Epstein-Barr virus, through mechanisms that may involve chromatin and/or transcriptional regulation.
Post-translational modifications
Sumoylated. Sumoylation depends on a functional nuclear localization signal but is not necessary for nuclear import or nuclear body targeting.
Sumoylated. Sumoylated with SUMO1. Sumoylation depends on a functional nuclear localization signal but is not necessary for nuclear import or nuclear body targeting. Sumoylation may stabilize the interaction with CBX5.
(Microbial infection) Immediate early protein IE1 of human cytomegalovirus (HHV-5) interferes with the sumoylation of SP100.
Tissue Specificity
Widely expressed. Sp100-B is expressed only in spleen, tonsil, thymus, mature B-cell line and some T-cell line, but not in brain, liver, muscle or non-lymphoid cell lines.
Cellular localization
- Nucleus
- Nucleus
- PML body
- Nucleus
- Nuclear body
- Cytoplasm
- Differences in the subnuclear localization of the different isoforms seem to exist and may also be cell cycle- and interferon-dependent. Accumulates in the cytoplasm upon FAS activation.
- Isoform Sp100-C
- Nucleus
- Forms a reticulate or track-like nuclear pattern with denser concentrations at the nuclear lamina and surrounding the nucleoli, a pattern reminiscent of heterochromatin-rich regions according to PubMed:11313457.
Alternative names
Nuclear autoantigen Sp-100, Nuclear dot-associated Sp100 protein, Speckled 100 kDa, SP100