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Multiple nuclear factors interact with the immunoglobulin enhancer sequences   总被引:536,自引:0,他引:536  
R Sen  D Baltimore 《Cell》1986,46(5):705-716
To characterize proteins that bind to the immunoglobulin (Ig) heavy chain and the kappa light chain enhancers, an electrophoretic mobility shift assay with end-labeled DNA fragments was used. Three binding proteins have been found. One is NF-A, a factor found in all tested cell types that binds to the octamer sequence found upstream of all Ig variable region gene segments and to the same octamer in the heavy chain enhancer. The second, also ubiquitous, protein binds to a sequence in both the heavy chain and the kappa enhancers that was previously shown to be protected from methylation in vivo. Other closely related sites do not compete for this binding, implying a restriction enzyme-like binding specificity. The third protein binds to a sequence in the kappa enhancer (and to an identical sequence in the SV40 enhancer) and is restricted in its occurrence to B cells.  相似文献   

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The mouse amylase gene Amy-2.2 is expressed at high levels specifically in the acinar cells of the pancreas. The region between -172 and -110 of this gene includes sequence elements common to pancreas-specific genes. Nuclear proteins with specific affinity for this region were partially purified from rat pancreas. The consensus element of another pancreas-specific gene, elastase 1, competes for protein binding to the amylase sequences. Binding was localized by DNase I protection to the sequence -156 to -122. Site-directed mutagenesis of this sequence resulted in concomitant loss of protein binding and enhancer activity. Photo-affinity labelling of pancreatic nuclear extracts identified one predominant binding protein with a molecular weight of approximately 75 kDa. The data indicate that binding of this nuclear protein is essential for the enhancer activity of this pancreas-specific element.  相似文献   

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The rat mast cell protease gene, RMCP II, is specifically expressed in the mucosal subclass of rat mast cells. We show here that the 5'-flanking region of this gene contains a mast cell-specific enhancer that directs preferential expression of a linked reporter gene (human growth hormone) transfected into rat basophilic leukemia cells. A DNA fragment containing the enhancer sequence is capable of binding specifically to mast cell nuclear trans-acting factors. The sequence of this enhancer element contains a region of homology to a consensus core sequence present in the enhancer region of the pancreatic protease genes.  相似文献   

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Binding sites of isolated rat pancreatic islets have been shown to interact with insulin. Employing various species-insulins, insulin analogues and substances not being structurally related to insulin, structure-specificity as well as pH- and temperature-dependence of insulin binding to rat pancreatic islets have been studied. Rat insulin displaced 125 I-insulin from its binding sites in the same concentration-dependent manner as pork insulin did, whereas the insulin analogue des-(phe-val-asp)B1-3-p-glu B4-insulin was less effective. Pork C-peptide hardly competed for binding and pork proinsulin did not compete at all. Both the species' insulins inhibited glucose (16.7 mM)-induced insulin secretion. The inhibitory effect was less when des-(phe-val-asp)B1-3-p-glu B4-insulin was employed and no inhibition of insulin secretion was observed by the use of pork C-peptide or proinsulin. Glucagon and somatostatin did not affect insulin binding. pH optimum of insulin binding appears to be in the range between 7.0 and 8.0. Binding was augmented with increasing temperature up to 37 degrees C. It is concluded that rat pancreatic islets possess insulin because binding and biological potency of substances related to insulin were in harmony. Moreover pH- and temperature-optimum of insulin binding are in a physiological range.  相似文献   

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The 5' regulatory region (-345 to +1) of the rat insulin I gene (Ins-I) was examined for binding to cellular factors with short oligodeoxynucleotide probes. Over 40 binding species were detected. The binding profiles were specific for each cell type studied. We characterized the factors binding two elements crucial for enhancer activity (the Nir and Far boxes) which bear sequence similarity to the microE1, microE2, and microE3 elements of the immunoglobulin heavy-chain enhancer. The Nir box binds three cellular factors that display preferential affinities for microE1, microE2, or microE3, and the Far box binds two factors related to microE2 or microE3. The insulin gene enhancer was mutated at the Nir box element to reflect the sequences of microE1, microE2, or microE3. Ins-microE2 was fully active, Ins-microE3 was partially active, and Ins-microE1 was inactive. Thus, factors similar or identical to nuclear factor NF-microE1, NF-microE2, or NF-microE3 may play a role in the activity of the insulin gene enhancer.  相似文献   

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We have used electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSA) to detect B cell lineage-specific nuclear proteins that bind to diverse segments within and 3' of the Ig H chain gene cluster. DNA binding sites include sequences 5' of each of the following C region genes: mu, gamma 1, gamma 2a, epsilon, and alpha. For the most part, these binding sites lie 5' of CH-associated tandem repeats. Binding sites for the same B cell lineage-specific proteins have also been defined in the region 3' of C alpha, close to a recently described B cell-specific enhancer element. Cross-competition of EMSA indicates that the B cell lineage-specific nucleoprotein is indistinguishable from those described previously by others: S alpha-BP and BSAP. Because of the diverse sequences recognized by this protein, we term it NF-HB, B-lineage-specific nuclear factor that binds to Ig H gene segments. EMSA using segments 5' of S gamma 2a (5'S gamma 2a-176) and 3' of C alpha (3' alpha-88) shows multiple binding complexes, two of which are B cell lineage specific. The B cell-specific complex with fastest mobility contains only NF-HB, and the one with slowest mobility contains NF-HB together with a ubiquitous DNA-binding protein(s). The ubiquitous binding protein is different for 5' S gamma 2a-176 and for 3' alpha-88, representing the formation of protein-NF-HB complexes specific for these particular Ig DNA regions. Spleen cells show a single band upon EMSA with either 5'S gamma 2a-176 or 3' alpha-88. Upon LPS stimulation, additional binding complexes of slower mobility were formed resulting in a pattern comparable to those detected in pro-B, pre-B, and B cell lines. We hypothesize that NF-HB may promote physical interactions between the 3' alpha-enhancer and segments of the Ig H gene cluster.  相似文献   

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Cell-specific expression of the insulin gene is dependent on a conserved 8-basepair sequence, GCCATCTG, present in two copies in the 5' flanking DNA of the rat insulin 1 gene (Nir and Far elements). A protein factor with well characterized binding affinities binds to this sequence and is unique to the nuclei of insulin-producing cells. Using the Nir element as a probe to screen a hamster insulinoma cDNA expression library, we cloned two cDNA inserts that encode two related helix-loop-helix DNA-binding proteins: Syrian hamster Pan-1 (shPan-1) and Syrian hamster Pan-2 (shPan-2). These clones have minimal differences from the previously reported human E47/E12 and rat PAN (rPan) DNA-binding proteins. In vitro translated protein products of both clones bound the insulin gene promoter Nir and far elements as well as the E2 elements of the mu heavy chain and kappa light chain immunoglobulin genes. Treating insulinoma cell nuclear extract with antiserum selectively directed to each of the two shPan proteins demonstrated the presence of each form of shPan in separate DNA-binding complexes, which together form the previously described, cell-specific, Nir element-binding complex. We conclude that shPan-1 and shPan-2 are the hamster homologs of the ubiquitous E47/E12 and rPan proteins, but form parts of distinct DNA-binding complexes apparently found only in the nuclei of insulin-producing cells.  相似文献   

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Immunoglobulin (Ig) μ heavy-chain gene enhancer activity is mediated by multiple DNA binding proteins. Mutations of several protein binding sites in the enhancer do not affect enhancer activity significantly. This feature, termed redundancy, is thought to be due to functional compensation of the mutated sites by other elements within the enhancer. In this study, we identified the elements that make the basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) protein binding sites, μE2 and μE3, redundant. The major compensatory element is a binding site for interferon regulatory factors (IRFs) and not one of several other bHLH protein binding sites. These studies also provide the first evidence for a role of IRF proteins in Ig heavy-chain gene expression. In addition, we reconstituted the activity of a monomeric μ enhancer in nonlymphoid cells and defined the domains of the ETS gene required for function.  相似文献   

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