Exons and functional regions of the human vitamin D receptor gene around and within the main 1a promoter are well conserved among mammals |
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Authors: | Jehan Frédéric d'Alésio Arnold Garabédian Michèle |
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Affiliation: | aInserm U561, Hôpital Saint Vincent de Paul, 82 Avenue Denfert-Rochereau, 75014 Paris, France |
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Abstract: | The human vitamin D receptor (hVDR) gene encompasses eight exons (2–9) in the so-called coding region and six more exons (1a–1f) in the so-called regulatory region, which contains several reported promoters. Evolutionary comparison performed on the VDR promoter sequences of a dozen of mammalian species shows a very high conservation of numerous regions around and in the 1a promoter, including exons 1e, 1a and 1d, and the Sp1 site region. This suggests that the so-called 1a promoter is well conserved among mammals. Homology among mammals also concerns three functional SNP site regions of the hVDR 1a promoter, the 1e-G-1739A SNP region (a Cdx-2 binding site), and both 1a-G-1521C and 1a-A-1012G sites, the 1a-1012A being located within a GATA site. Interestingly, the 1521G and 1012A nucleotides are being evolutionary conserved, suggesting that the 1521C/1012G haplotype, which is found in human chromosomes (43% of Caucasians), is a human specificity. |
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Keywords: | Vitamin D receptor Vitamin D receptor gene Vitamin D receptor promoter Mammals DNA sequence homologie |
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