POU domain, class 3, transcription factor 2 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the POU3F2gene.[4][5]
Function
N-Oct-3 is a protein belonging to a large family of transcription factors that bind to the octameric DNA sequence ATGCAAAT. Most of these proteins share a highly homologous region, referred to as the POU domain, which occurs in several mammalian transcription factors, including the octamer-binding proteins Oct1 (POU2F1; MIM 164175) and Oct2 (POU2F2; MIM 164176), and the pituitary protein Pit1 (PIT1; MIM 173110).
Class III POU genes are expressed predominantly in the CNS. It is likely that CNS-specific transcription factors such as these play an important role in mammalian neurogenesis by regulating their diverse patterns of gene expression.[5]
Disease linkage
The POU3F2 protein associates with the Bipolar disorder. It is involved in the neocortex development in mice, and is linked to a single nucleotide polymorphism, Rs1906252, that is associated with a cognitive phenotype: processing information speed.[6]
Chromosome 6q16.1 deletions resulting in loss of one copy of POU3F2 have been shown to cause a human syndrome of susceptibility to obesity and variable levels of developmental delay and Intellectual Disability.[7]
He X, Treacy MN, Simmons DM, Ingraham HA, Swanson LW, Rosenfeld MG (July 1989). "Expression of a large family of POU-domain regulatory genes in mammalian brain development". Nature. 340 (6228): 35–41. Bibcode:1989Natur.340...35H. doi:10.1038/340035a0. PMID2739723. S2CID4275887.
Eisen T, Easty DJ, Bennett DC, Goding CR (November 1995). "The POU domain transcription factor Brn-2: elevated expression in malignant melanoma and regulation of melanocyte-specific gene expression". Oncogene. 11 (10): 2157–64. PMID7478537.
Atanasoski S, Toldo SS, Malipiero U, Schreiber E, Fries R, Fontana A (March 1995). "Isolation of the human genomic brain-2/N-Oct 3 gene (POUF3) and assignment to chromosome 6q16". Genomics. 26 (2): 272–80. doi:10.1016/0888-7543(95)80211-4. PMID7601453.
Thomson JA, Murphy K, Baker E, Sutherland GR, Parsons PG, Sturm RA, Thomson F (August 1995). "The brn-2 gene regulates the melanocytic phenotype and tumorigenic potential of human melanoma cells". Oncogene. 11 (4): 691–700. PMID7651733.
Atanasoski S, Schreiber E, Fontana A, Herr W (March 1997). "N-Oct 5 is generated by in vitro proteolysis of the neural POU-domain protein N-Oct 3". Oncogene. 14 (11): 1287–94. doi:10.1038/sj.onc.1200953. PMID9178889. S2CID20331599.
Smit DJ, Smith AG, Parsons PG, Muscat GE, Sturm RA (November 2000). "Domains of Brn-2 that mediate homodimerization and interaction with general and melanocytic transcription factors". European Journal of Biochemistry. 267 (21): 6413–22. doi:10.1046/j.1432-1327.2000.01737.x. PMID11029584.