The β-globin gene dominant control region interacts differently with distal and proximal promoter elements.
January 1990
Article
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We have studied the interaction between the dominant control region (DCR) and the promoter of the human beta-globin gene. Expression analysis in MEL cells has revealed that the DCR contains a number of elements capable of replacing the upstream (-250 to -100) erythroid-specific region of the promoter. The DCR strongly stimulates expression from a promoter possessing only a TATA box. However, this basic level of transcription is not induced upon erythroid differentiation of the cells. Mutational analysis of the minimal (-100, noninducible) promoter shows that only the combination of the DCR and the CAC/CCAAT elements provides erythroid-specific transcription. These regions act synergistically to produce full regulated expression during erythroid differentiation.
- Human
- Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
- Gene Expression Regulation
- Molecular Sequence Data
- Base Sequence
- Tumor Cells, Cultured
- Cell Differentiation
- Transcription, Genetic
- DNA Mutational Analysis
- *Promoter Regions (Genetics)
- Leukemia, Erythroblastic, Acute
- 9004-22-2 (Globins)
- Globins/*genetics
- Erythrocytes/cytology/*metabolism