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The -198 T----C mutation in the promoter of the A gamma-globin gene increases 20-30 fold the expression of this gene in adult erythroid cells of patients (Hereditary Persistence of Fetal Hemoglobin, HPFH). We show here that this mutation creates a strong binding site, resembling a CACCC box, for two ubiquitous nuclear proteins, one of which is Sp1. The mutated promoter is four to five-fold more efficient than a normal gamma-globin promoter in driving expression of a CAT reporter plasmid when transfected into erythroid cells. The overexpression of the mutant is abolished by the introduction of an additional mutation disrupting the new binding site. No overexpression of the mutant is observed in non-erythroid cells, indicating that the ubiquitous factors bound on the mutated sequence must cooperate with erythroid specific factors.  相似文献   

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Non-deletion Hereditary Persistence of Fetal Hemoglobin (HPFH) is characterized by great elevation of the synthesis, in adult age, of fetal hemoglobin (HbF), of either the A gamma or G gamma type. Strong genetic evidence indicates point mutations in the G gamma- or A gamma-globin promoter as responsible for overexpression of the mutated gene. Here we report that a 13 nucleotides deletion in the CCAAT box region of the A gamma-globin promoter, associated with greater than 100 fold overexpression of the gene, abolishes the in vitro binding of the ubiquitous factors CP1 and CDP (CCAAT displacement protein) and of the erythroid specific protein NFE3. Loss of NFE3 binding is consistent with a similar effect of the -117 G greater than A HPFH mutation, suggesting a possible role of NFE3 as a negatively acting factor. In addition, loss of CDP binding indicates that this alteration might also contribute to the HPFH phenotype in this particular case, suggesting possible heterogeneity of the mechanisms causing HPFH.  相似文献   

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The molecular mechanisms responsible for the human fetal-to-adult hemoglobin switch have not yet been elucidated. Point mutations identified in the promoter regions of gamma-globin genes from individuals with nondeletion hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin (HPFH) may mark cis-acting sequences important for this switch, and the trans-acting factors which interact with these sequences may be integral parts in the puzzle of gamma-globin gene regulation. We have used gel retardation and footprinting strategies to define nuclear proteins which bind to the normal gamma-globin promoter and to determine the effect of HPFH mutations on the binding of a subset of these proteins. We have identified five proteins in human erythroleukemia cells (K562 and HEL) which bind to the proximal promoter region of the normal gamma-globin gene. One factor, gamma CAAT, binds the duplicated CCAAT box sequences; the -117 HPFH mutation increases the affinity of interaction between gamma CAAT and its cognate site. Two proteins, gamma CAC1 and gamma CAC2, bind the CACCC sequence. These proteins require divalent cations for binding. The -175 HPFH mutation interferes with the binding of a fourth protein, gamma OBP, which binds an octamer sequence (ATGCAAAT) in the normal gamma-globin promoter. The HPFH phenotype of the -175 mutation indicates that the octamer-binding protein may play a negative regulatory role in this setting. A fifth protein, EF gamma a, binds to sequences which overlap the octamer-binding site. The erythroid-specific distribution of EF gamma a and its close approximation to an apparent repressor-binding site suggest that it may be important in gamma-globin regulation.  相似文献   

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Genetic evidence indicates that single point mutations in the gamma-globin promoter may be the cause of high expression of the mutated gene in the adult period (Hereditary Persistence of Fetal Hemoglobin, HPFH). Here we show that one of these mutations characterized by a T----C substitution at position -175 in a conserved octamer (ATGCAAAT) sequence, abolishes the ability of a ubiquitous octamer binding nuclear protein to bind a gamma-globin promoter fragment containing the mutated sequence; however, the ability of two erythroid specific proteins to bind the same fragment is increased three to five fold. DMS interference and binding experiments with mutated fragments indicate that the ubiquitous protein recognizes the octamer sequence, while the erythroid specific proteins B2, B3 recognize flanking nucleotides. Competition experiments indicate that protein B2 corresponds to an erythroid-specific protein known to bind to a consensus GATAG sequence present at several locations in alpha, beta and gamma-globin genes. Although the distal CCAAT box region of the gamma-globin gene shows a related sequence, an oligonucleotide including this sequence does not show any ability to bind the above mentioned erythroid protein; instead, it binds a different erythroid specific protein, in addition to a ubiquitous protein. The -117 G----A mutation also known to cause HPFH, and mapping two nucleotides upstream from the CCAAT box, greatly decreases the binding of the erythroid-specific, but not that of the ubiquitous protein, to the CCAAT box region fragment.  相似文献   

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The T to C substitution at position -175 of the gamma-globin gene has been identified in some individuals with non-deletion hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin (HPFH). In this study, the HPFH phenotype was reestablished in transgenic mice carrying the mu'LCRAgamma(-175)psibetadeltabeta construct, which contained a 3.1-kb mu'LCR cassette linked to a 29-kb fragment from the Agamma-to beta-globin gene with the natural chromosome arrangement but with the -175 mutation, which provided evidence for this single mutation as the cause of this form of HPFH. The HPFH phenotype was also reproduced in transgenic mice carrying the mu'LCRAgamma(-173)psibetadeltabeta construct, in which the -175 T to C Agamma gene was substituted with the -173 T to C Agamma gene. In vitro experiments proved that the -175 mutation significantly reduced binding of Oct-1 but not GATA-1, whereas the -173 mutation dramatically decreased binding of GATA-1 but not Oct-1. These results suggest that abrogation of either GATA-1 or Oct-1 binding to this promoter region may result in the HPFH phenotype. An in vivo footprinting assay revealed that either the -175 mutation or the -173 mutation significantly decreased overall protein binding to this promoter region in adult erythrocytes of transgenic mice. We hypothesize that a multiprotein complex containing GATA-1, Oct-1, and other protein factors may contribute to the formation of a repressive chromatin structure that silences gamma-globin gene expression in normal adult erythrocytes. Both the -173 and -175 T to C substitutions may disrupt the complex assembly and result in the reactivation of the gamma-globin gene in adult erythrocytes.  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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In red blood cells ankyrin (ANK-1) provides the primary linkage between the erythrocyte membrane skeleton and the plasma membrane. We have previously demonstrated that a 271-bp 5'-flanking region of the ANK-1 gene has promoter activity in erythroid, but not non-erythroid, cell lines. To determine whether the ankyrin promoter could direct erythroid-specific expression in vivo, we analyzed transgenic mice containing the ankyrin promoter fused to the human (A)gamma-globin gene. Sixteen of 17 lines expressed the transgene in erythroid cells indicating nearly position-independent expression. We also observed a significant correlation between the level of Ank/(A)gamma-globin mRNA and transgene copy number. The level of Ank/(A)gamma mRNA averaged 11% of mouse alpha-globin mRNA per gene copy at all developmental stages. The addition of the HS2 enhancer from the beta-globin locus control region to the Ank/(A)gamma-globin transgene resulted in Ank/(A)gamma-globin mRNA expression in embryonic and fetal erythroid cells in six of eight lines but resulted in absent or dramatically reduced levels of Ank/(A)gamma-globin mRNA in adult erythroid cells in eight of eight transgenic lines. These data indicate that the minimal ankyrin promoter contains all sequences necessary and sufficient for erythroid-specific, copy number-dependent, position-independent expression of the human (A)gamma-globin gene.  相似文献   

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