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The human G gamma-globin and beta-globin genes are expressed in erythroid cells at different stages of human development, and previous studies have shown that the two cloned genes are also expressed in a differential stage-specific manner in transgenic mice. The G gamma-globin gene is expressed only in murine embryonic erythroid cells, while the beta-globin gene is active only at the fetal and adult stages. In this study, we analyzed transgenic mice carrying a series of hybrid genes in which different upstream, intragenic, or downstream sequences were contributed by the beta-globin or G gamma-globin gene. We found that hybrid 5'G gamma/3'beta globin genes containing G gamma-globin sequences upstream from the initiation codon were expressed in embryonic erythroid cells at levels similar to those of an intact G gamma-globin transgene. In contrast, beta-globin upstream sequences were insufficient for expression of 5'beta/3'G gamma hybrid globin genes or a beta-globin-metallothionein fusion gene in adult erythroid cells. However, beta-globin downstream sequences, including 212 base pairs of exon III and 1,900 base pairs of 3'-flanking DNA, were able to activate a 5'G gamma/3'beta hybrid globin gene in fetal and adult erythroid cells. These experiments suggest that positive regulatory elements upstream from the G gamma-globin and downstream from the beta-globin gene are involved in the differential expression of the two genes during development.  相似文献   

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Tissue- and developmental stage-specific expression of the human beta-like globin genes is regulated by a combination of ubiquitous and erythroid-restricted trans factors that bind to cis elements near each of the five active genes. Additional interactions of these cis and trans factors with sequences located in the far 5' end of the cluster occur by as yet obscure mechanisms. Because of the complexity of this regulatory puzzle, precise identification of the determinants that control hemoglobin switching has proven difficult. Phylogenetic footprinting is an evolutionary approach to this problem which is based on the supposition that the basic mechanisms of switching are conserved throughout mammalian phylogeny. Alignment of the 5' flanking regions of the gamma genes of several species allows the identification of footprints of 100% conserved sequence. We have now tested oligomers spanning 13 such phylogenetic footprints and find that 12 are bound by nuclear proteins. One conserved element located at -1086 from the gamma genes exhibits repressor activity in transient transfection studies. The protein that binds this element, CSBP-1 (conserved sequence-binding protein 1), also binds at three sites within a silencer element upstream from the epsilon globin gene. Further analysis reveals that the CSBP-1 binding activity is identical to that of a recently cloned zinc finger protein that has been shown to act as a repressor in other systems. The binding of CSPB-1 to silencer sequences in the epsilon and gamma globin genes may be important in the stage-specific silencing of these genes.  相似文献   

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The CCAAT box is one of the conserved motifs found in globin promoters. It binds the CP1 protein. We noticed that the CCAAT-box region of embryonic/fetal, but not adult, globin promoters also contains one or two direct repeats of a short motif analogous to DR-1 binding sites for non-steroid nuclear hormone receptors. We show that a complex previously named NF-E3 binds to these repeats. In transgenic mice, destruction of the CCAAT motif within the human epsilon-globin promoter leads to substantial reduction in epsilon expression in embryonic erythroid cells, indicating that CP1 activates epsilon expression; in contrast, destruction of the DR-1 elements yields striking epsilon expression in definitive erythropoiesis, indicating that the NF-E3 complex acts as a developmental repressor of the epsilon gene. We also show that NF-E3 is immunologically related to COUP-TF orphan nuclear receptors. One of these, COUP-TF II, is expressed in embryonic/fetal erythroid cell lines, murine yolk sac, intra-embryonic splanchnopleura and fetal liver. In addition, the structure and abundance of NF-E3/COUP-TF complexes vary during fetal liver development. These results elucidate the structure as well as the role of NF-E3 in globin gene expression and provide evidence that nuclear hormone receptors are involved in the control of globin gene switching.  相似文献   

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The human fetal G gamma-globin and adult beta-globin genes are expressed in a tissue- and developmental stage-specific pattern in transgenic mice: the G gamma gene in embryonic cells and the beta gene in fetal and adult erythroid cells. Several of the cis-acting DNA sequences thought to be responsible for these patterns of expression are located 5' to the G gamma-globin gene and 3' to the beta-globin gene. To further define the locations and functional roles of these elements, we examined the effects of 5' truncations on the expression of the G gamma-globin gene, as well as the ability of G gamma-globin upstream sequences to alter the developmental regulation of a beta-globin gene, as well as the ability of G gamma-globin upstream sequences to alter the developmental regulation of a beta-globin gene. We found that sequences between -201 and -136 are essential for expression of the G gamma-globin gene, whereas those upstream of -201 have little effect on the level or tissue or stage specificity of G gamma-globin expression. The G gamma-globin upstream sequences from -201 to -136 were, furthermore, capable of activating a linked beta-globin gene in embryonic blood cells; however, a G gamma-globin fragment from -383 to -206 was similarly active in this assay, and the complete fragment from -383 to -136 was considerably more active than either of the smaller fragments, suggesting the presence of multiple cis-acting elements for embryonic blood cells. Our data also suggested the possibility of a negative regulatory element between -201 and -136. These results are discussed in relation to several DNA elements in the G gamma-globin upstream region, which have been shown to bind nuclear factors in erythroid cells. Finally, we observed that removal of the beta-globin 3'-flanking sequences, including the 3' enhancer, from the G gamma-globin upstream-beta-globin hybrid gene resulted in a 25-fold reduction in expression in embryonic blood cells. This suggests that the beta-globin 3' enhancer is potentially active at the embryonic stage and thus cannot be solely responsible for the fetal or adult specificity of the beta-globin gene.  相似文献   

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Located in different chromatin contexts and with different developmental switching mode, human alpha- and beta-globin gene clusters are co-regulated temporally and quantitatively to keep balanced expression. Here, by exchanging their key upstream regulatory elements (UREs) in cluster level, and investigating the expression level of exogenous globin genes in the bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) mediated transgenic mice, we explored the similarities and differences in the regulatory effects between alpha-upstream regulatory element (alpha-URE) and beta-locus control region (beta-LCR). The results showed that, after exchange, the developmental switching modes of human alpha- and beta-like globin genes had changed, with lost expression of epsilon- and alpha1-genes. Their expression levels also decreased. Our study suggests that the regulation of alpha-URE and beta-LCR on the expression level and developmental switching mode of downstream globin genes is cluster specific.  相似文献   

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The duck beta-globin gene cluster contains a single enhancer element   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
An erythroid-specific enhancer was previously identified in the 3'-flanking region of the beta adult gene in chicken and duck, by transfection into AEV transformed chicken erythroblasts. Here we show that the duck enhancer is equally active in erythroid human K562 cells, presenting an embryonic/fetal program of globin gene expression. Furthermore, no other enhancer was found within the 20 kb of DNA including four beta-like globin genes as well as a 1.5 kb upstream and a 3 kb downstream sequence.  相似文献   

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The competition model of globin gene regulation states that the gamma-globin gene precludes expression of the beta-globin gene in early development by competing for the enhancing activity of the locus control region. The gamma-globin gene with a -161 promoter is sufficient for suppressing beta-globin gene expression, and the gamma-globin TATA and CACCC elements are necessary for this effect. In this work, stable transfection and transgenic mouse assays have been performed with constructs containing HS3 and HS2 from the locus control region, the gamma-globin gene with promoter mutation(s), and the beta-globin gene. The data indicate that the gamma-globin TATA and CACCC elements together have at least an additive effect on the beta/gamma-globin mRNA ratio in early erythroid cells, suggesting that the elements work coordinately to suppress beta-globin gene expression. The TATA and CACCC are the major gamma-globin promoter elements responsible for this effect. Transgenic mouse experiments indicate that the gamma-globin TATA element plays a role in gamma-globin expression and beta-globin suppression in the embryo and fetus; in contrast, the CACCC element has a stage-specific effect in the fetus. The results suggest that, as is true for the erythroid Krüppel-like factor (EKLF) and the beta-globin promoter CACCC, a protein(s) binds to the gamma-globin CACCC element to coordinate stage-specific gene expression.  相似文献   

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