Synthetic Human β-Globin 5'HS2 Constructs Function as Partially Active Locus Control Regions.
January 1993
Article
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Transgenes linked to the beta-globin locus control region (LCR) are transcribed in a copy-dependent manner that is independent of the integration site. It has previously been shown that the LCR 5'HS2 region does not require its NF-E2 dimer binding site for LCR activity. In this paper we analyse synthetic 5'HS2 core constructs containing point mutations in the other factor binding sites 3' of the NF-E2 dimer site. The results show that 5'HS2 core is a partially active LCR that functions in a concatamer of at least two copies but not when present as a single copy in transgenic mice and that no single binding site within 5'HS2 is required for position-independent expression. In addition, the H-BP factor is identical to upstream stimulatory factor (USF) and full enhancement levels by 5'HS2 core in MEL cells require a combination of all the factor binding sites. We suggest that 5'HS2 cores in a concatamer interact with each other to establish an area of open chromatin and that this process may be the basis of LCR function.
- Animals
- Cell Line
- 9007-49-2 (dna)
- Human
- Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
- Mice
- Molecular Sequence Data
- Transfection
- Base Sequence
- 0 (DNA-Binding Proteins)
- Restriction Mapping
- DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics
- Mice, Transgenic
- Introns
- DNA/genetics/isolation & purification
- 0 (Transcription Factors)
- Transcription Factors/genetics
- Fetus
- Mutagenesis, Site-Directed
- 9004-22-2 (Globins)
- Globins/*genetics
- 125267-48-3 (erythroid-specific DNA-binding factor)
- *Genes, Regulator
- *Genes, Synthetic
- Liver/physiology
- Zinc Fingers/genetics