Journal article
Cell cycle, vol. 3(2), 2004, pp. 95-97
APA
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Hurlin, P., Zhou, Z.-Q., Toyo-oka, K., Ota, S., Walker, W. L., Hirotsune, S., & Wynshaw-Boris, A. (2004). Evidence of Mnt-Myc Antagonism Revealed by Mnt Gene Deletion. Cell Cycle, 3(2), 95–97.
Chicago/Turabian
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Hurlin, P., Zi-Qiang Zhou, K. Toyo-oka, S. Ota, William L Walker, S. Hirotsune, and A. Wynshaw-Boris. “Evidence of Mnt-Myc Antagonism Revealed by Mnt Gene Deletion.” Cell cycle 3, no. 2 (2004): 95–97.
MLA
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Hurlin, P., et al. “Evidence of Mnt-Myc Antagonism Revealed by Mnt Gene Deletion.” Cell Cycle, vol. 3, no. 2, 2004, pp. 95–97.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{p2004a,
title = {Evidence of Mnt-Myc Antagonism Revealed by Mnt Gene Deletion},
year = {2004},
issue = {2},
journal = {Cell cycle},
pages = {95-97},
volume = {3},
author = {Hurlin, P. and Zhou, Zi-Qiang and Toyo-oka, K. and Ota, S. and Walker, William L and Hirotsune, S. and Wynshaw-Boris, A.}
}
Myc proteins play a central role in promoting cell proliferation and contribute to a diverse array of cancers. Myc function appears completely dependent on heterodimerization with Max through related bHLHZip regions. Max interaction with Myc is required for DNA binding at so-called E-box sequences and Myc-dependent transcriptional activation. The identification of Mnt as a ubiquitously expressed Max-interacting transcriptional repressor with similar DNA binding specificity raised the possibility that Mnt may serve a general role as a Myc antagonist.