A COMPLEX ARRAY OF POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE ELEMENTS REGULATES THE CHICKEN ALPHA-A-CRYSTALLIN GENE - INVOLVEMENT OF PAX-6, USF, CREB AND/OR CREM, AND AP-1 PROTEINS

被引:130
作者
CVEKL, A
SAX, CM
BRESNICK, EH
PIATIGORSKY, J
机构
[1] NEI,MOLEC & DEV BIOL LAB,BETHESDA,MD 20892
[2] NIDDKD,MOLEC BIOL LAB,BETHESDA,MD 20892
关键词
D O I
10.1128/MCB.14.11.7363
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The abundance of crystallins (>80% of the soluble protein) in the ocular lens provides advantageous markers for selective gene expression during cellular differentiation. Here we shown by functional and protein-DNA binding experiments that the chicken alpha A-crystallin gene is regulated by at least five control elements located at sites A (-148 to -139), B (-138 to -132), C (-128 to -101), D (-102 to -93), and E (-56 to -41). Factors interacting with these sites were characterized immunologically and by gel mobility shift experiments. The results are interpreted with the following model. Site A binds USF and is part of a composite element with site B. Site B binds CREB and/or CREM to enhance expression in the lens and binds an AP-1 complex including CREB, Fra2 and/or JunD which interacts with USF on site A to repress expression in fibroblasts. Sites C and E (which is conserved across species) bind Pax-6 in the lens to stimulate alpha A-crystallin promoter activity. These experiments provide the first direct data that Pax-6 contributes to the lens-specific expression of a crystallin gene. Site D (-104 to -93) binds USF and is a negative element. Thus, the data indicate that USF, CREB and/or CREM (or AP-1 factors), and Pax-6 bind a complex array of positive and negative cis-acting elements of the chicken alpha A-crystallin gene to control high expression in the lens and repression in fibroblasts.
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页码:7363 / 7376
页数:14
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