Stephanou A, Latchman D S
Institute of Child Health, University College London, Medical Molecular Biology Unit, London, UK.
Growth Factors. 2005 Sep;23(3):177-82. doi: 10.1080/08977190500178745.
The signal transducers and activators of transcription (STATs) are a family of transcription factors, which were originally identified on the basis of their ability to transduce a signal from a cellular receptor into the nucleus and modulate the transcription of specific genes. Interestingly, recent studies have demonstrated that STAT-1 plays a key role in promoting apoptosis in a variety of cell types, whereas STAT-3 has an anti-apoptotic effect. Moreover, whilst STAT-3 promotes cellular proliferation and is activated in a variety of tumour cells, STAT-1 appears to have an anti-proliferative effect. Although the initially characterised signal transduction events mediated by STAT-1 and STAT-3 involve the DNA binding and transcriptional activation domains of the factor, some of their other effects appear not to require DNA binding. Therefore, STAT-1 and STAT-3 can mediate the regulation of gene transcription both by direct DNA binding and via a co-activator mechanism and despite their very similar structures, have antagonistic effects on cellular proliferation and apoptosis.
信号转导及转录激活因子(STATs)是一类转录因子,最初是根据它们将细胞受体信号转导至细胞核并调节特定基因转录的能力而被鉴定出来的。有趣的是,最近的研究表明,STAT-1在多种细胞类型中促进细胞凋亡方面发挥关键作用,而STAT-3具有抗凋亡作用。此外,虽然STAT-3促进细胞增殖并在多种肿瘤细胞中被激活,但STAT-1似乎具有抗增殖作用。尽管最初表征的由STAT-1和STAT-3介导的信号转导事件涉及该因子的DNA结合和转录激活结构域,但它们的一些其他作用似乎不需要DNA结合。因此,STAT-1和STAT-3可以通过直接DNA结合和共激活机制介导基因转录的调节,尽管它们结构非常相似,但对细胞增殖和凋亡具有拮抗作用。