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1.
Expression of the human alpha and beta globin gene clusters is regulated by remote sequences, referred to as HS -40 and the beta-locus control region (beta-LCR) that lie 5-40 kb upstream of the genes they activate. Because of their common ancestry, similar organization and coordinate expression it has often been assumed that regulation of the globin gene clusters by HS -40 and the beta-LCR occurs via similar mechanisms. Using interspecific hybrids containing chromosomes with naturally occurring deletions of HS -40 we have shown that, in contrast to the beta-LCR, this element exerts no discernible effect on long-range chromatin structure and in addition does not influence formation of DNase I hypersensitive sites at the alpha globin promoters. These differences in the behaviour of HS -40 and the beta-LCR may reflect their contrasting influence on gene expression in transgenic mice and may result from the differing requirements of these elements in their radically different, natural chromosomal environments; the alpha cluster lying within a region of constitutively 'open' chromatin and the beta cluster in a segment of chromatin which opens in a tissue-specific manner. Differences in the hierarchical control of the alpha and beta globin clusters may exemplify more general differences in the regulation of eukaryotic genes which lie in similar open or closed chromosomal regions.  相似文献   

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The alpha- and beta-globin gene clusters have been extensively studied. Regulation of these genes ensures that proteins derived from both loci are produced in balanced amounts, and that expression is tissue-restricted and specific to developmental stages. Here we compare the subnuclear location of the endogenous alpha- and beta-globin loci in primary human cells in which the genes are either actively expressed or silent. In erythroblasts, the alpha- and beta-globin genes are localized in areas of the nucleus that are discrete from alpha-satellite-rich constitutive heterochromatin. However, in cycling lymphocytes, which do not express globin genes, the distribution of alpha- and beta-globin genes was markedly different. beta-globin loci, in common with several inactive genes studied here (human c-fms and SOX-1) and previously (mouse lambda5, CD4, CD8alpha, RAGs, TdT and Sox-1), were associated with pericentric heterochromatin in a high proportion of cycling lymphocytes. In contrast, alpha-globin genes were not associated with centromeric heterochromatin in the nucleus of normal human lymphocytes, in lymphocytes from patients with alpha-thalassaemia lacking the regulatory HS-40 element or entire upstream region of the alpha-globin locus, or in mouse erythroblasts and lymphocytes derived from human alpha-globin transgenic mice. These data show that the normal regulated expression of alpha- and beta-globin gene clusters occurs in different nuclear environments in primary haemopoietic cells.  相似文献   

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All mammals use hemoglobin (Hb) to transport oxygen. Each Hb molecule is a tetramer of two pairs of unlike globin polypeptide chains. Equal amount of subunit globin chains derived from the corresponding alpha- and beta-like genes can always result during development though the two separate gene clusters are located on two different chromosomes and spatially transcribed within different nuclear domains. Disturbance of this balance will result in degradation or precipitation of the excessive globin chains, which is the character of various thalassemic syndromes. In previous studies, we had established two kinds of bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) mediated transgenic mouse models, which contain respectively the entire human alpha- and beta-globin cluster. Here, we investigated the regulatory relationship between the two clusters by interbreeding these two kinds of transgenic mice. The levels of human alpha- and beta-mRNA in the various hybrid lines reflect the levels in the original transgenic lines that contain either the alpha- or beta-globin cluster alone. The results suggested that there is no apparent cross talk or regulatory interaction between the two human globin clusters in transgenic mice.  相似文献   

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We have characterized the expression of the human zeta (zeta) gene, which encodes an embryonic alpha-like globin, in transgenic mice. We find that a 777 base pair fragment spanning erythroid specific hypersensitive site II (HSII) from the distal 5. region of the human beta globin gene cluster potentiates expression of the zeta globin gene. In the absence of the HSII fragment, no zeta expression is observed. Expression of the human zeta gene in mice parallels expression of a murine embryonic alpha-like globin gene (x). Thus, expression of the human zeta gene in mice requires linkage to an erythroid-specific enhancer sequence, but the presence of the enhancer does not affect the developmental regulation of the transgene. Our results indicate that the factors involved in switching from embryonic to adult alpha globin gene expression during development are evolutionarily conserved, and suggest that the transgenic mouse is an in vivo system in which the requirements for the developmental switch in alpha globin gene expression can be analyzed in detail.  相似文献   

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We have ligated two cosmids through an oligonucleotide linker to produce a single fragment spanning 70 kb of the human alpha-globin cluster, in which the alpha-like globin genes (zeta 2, alpha 2 and alpha 1), their regulatory element (HS-40) and erythroid-specific DNase I hypersensitive sites accurately retain their normal genomic organization. The zeta (embryonic) and alpha (embryonic, fetal and adult) globin genes were expressed in all 17 transgenic embryos. Similarly, all fetal and adult mice from seven transgenic lines that contained one or more copies of the fragment, produced up to 66% of the level of endogenous mouse alpha-globin mRNA. However, as for smaller constructs containing these elements, human alpha-globin expression was not copy number dependent and decreased by 1.5-9.0 fold during development. These findings suggest that either it is not possible to obtain full regulation of human alpha-globin expression in transgenic mice or, more likely, that additional alpha-globin regulatory elements lie beyond the 70 kb segment of DNA analysed.  相似文献   

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Histone modifications play an important role in eukaryotic gene regulation. However, the dynamic alteration of histone modification during development is poorly understood. In addition, the relationship between histone modification and globin gene switching remains unclear. Here, we assessed the dynamic pattern of histone modification (H3 acetylation, H4 acetylation, H3 K4 methylation, and H3 K79 methylation) along the murine alpha-globin locus, as well as along the human alpha-globin locus in transgenic mice, during globin gene switching in vivo. During the switching, histone modification at embryonic zeta-gene and fetal/adult alpha-genes displayed different developmental patterns. The level of histone modification at zeta-gene was developmentally regulated, in accordance with the level of zeta-gene expression, whereas the alpha-genes kept high level of histone modification at both developmental stages, regardless of their expression levels. Histone deacetylase inhibition selectively increased acetylation at the inactive zeta-gene in fetal livers, although it did not reactivate the gene expression. More importantly, an obvious increasing of histone modification level at major regulatory elements and fetal/adult alpha-genes was observed during the switching, suggesting that a conserved, extended chromatin opening within the locus occurs during globin gene switching.  相似文献   

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Retrovirus-mediated gene transfer of the human beta-globin gene into hematopoietic stem cells is an attractive approach to the therapy of human beta-globin gene disorders. However, expression of the transduced beta-globin gene linked to its proximal cis-acting sequences (-0.8 to +0.3 kb from the cap site) is considerably below the level required for a significant therapeutic effect. The discovery of the beta-locus control region (beta-LCR), organized in four major DNase I hypersensitive sites far upstream of the human beta-like globin gene cluster, provided a potential means to achieve a high level of expression of a linked human beta-globin gene, but initial attempts to incorporate beta-LCR derivatives in retroviral vectors resulted in the production of low-titer viruses with multiple rearrangements of the transmitted proviral structures. We now describe how extensive mutagenesis of the transduced beta-globin gene, eliminating a 372 bp intronic segment and multiple reverse polyadenylation and splicing signals, increases viral titer significantly and restores stability of proviral transmission upon infection of cell lines and bone marrow-repopulating cells. These optimized vectors have enabled us to analyze the expression properties of various retrovirally transduced beta-LCR derivatives in dimethylsulfoxide-induced murine erythroleukemia cells and to achieve ratios of human beta-globin/murine beta maj-globin mRNA, on a per gene basis, as high as 80%.  相似文献   

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High-level, tissue-specific expression of the beta-globin genes requires the presence of an upstream locus control region (LCR). The overall enhancer activity of the beta-globin complex LCR (beta-LCR) is dependent on the integrity of the tandem NF-E2 sites of HS-2. The NF-E2 protein which binds these sites is a heterodimeric basic leucine zipper protein composed of a tissue-specific subunit, p45 NF-E2, and a smaller subunit, p18 NF-E2, that is widely expressed. In these studies, we sought to investigate the role of NF-E2 in globin expression. We show that expression of a dominant-negative mutant p18 greatly reduces the amount of functional NF-E2 complex in the cell. Reduced levels of both alpha- and beta-globin were associated with the lower levels of NF-E2 activity in this cell line. Globin expression was fully restored upon the introduction of a tethered p45-p18 heterodimer. We also examined CB3 cells, a mouse erythroleukemia (MEL) cell line that does not express endogenous p45 NF-E2, and demonstrated that the restoration of globin gene expression was dependent upon the levels of expressed tethered NF-E2 heterodimer. Results of DNase I hypersensitivity mapping and in vivo footprinting assays showed no detectable chromatin alterations in beta-LCR HS-2 due to loss of NF-E2. Finally, we examined the specificity of NF-E2 for globin gene expression in MEL cells. These experiments indicate a critical role for the amino-terminal domain of p45 NF-E2 and show that a related protein, LCRF1, is unable to restore globin gene expression in p45 NF-E2-deficient cells. From these results, we conclude that NF-E2 is specifically required for high level goblin gene expression in MEL cells.  相似文献   

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How alpha and beta globin genes are organized and expressed in amniotes is of interest to researchers in a wide variety of fields. Data regarding this from avian species have been scarce. Using genomic and proteomic approaches, we present here our analysis of alpha and beta globins of zebra finch, a passerine bird. We show that finch alpha globin gene cluster has three genes (alphas 1–3), each orthologous to its chicken counterpart. Finch beta globin gene cluster has three genes (betas 1–3), with an additional pseudogene at the 3′ end. Finch beta3 is orthologous to chicken betaA, but the orthology of beta1 and beta2 to chicken counterparts is less clear. All six finch globins are confirmed to encode functional proteins. Gene expression in both globin gene clusters is regulated developmentally. Adult finch blood has a globin profile similar to that of adult chicken, with high levels of beta3 and alpha3 and moderate levels of alpha2. Finch embryonic primitive blood exhibits a globin profile very different from that of equivalent stage chick embryos, with all six globins expressed at high levels. Overall, our data provide a valuable resource for future studies in avian globin gene evolution and globin switching during erythropoietic development.  相似文献   

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In order to study the relationships among mammalian alpha-globin genes, we have determined the sequence of the 3' flanking region of the human alpha 1 globin gene and have made pairwise comparisons between sequenced alpha-globin genes. The flanking regions were examined in detail because sequence matches in these regions could be interpreted with the least complication from the gene duplications and conversions that have occurred frequently in mammalian alpha-like globin gene clusters. We found good matches between the flanking regions of human alpha 1 and rabbit alpha 1, human psi alpha 1 and goat I alpha, human alpha 2 and goat II alpha, and horse alpha 1 and goat II alpha. These matches were used to align the alpha-globin genes in gene clusters from different mammals. This alignment shows that genes at equivalent positions in the gene clusters of different mammals can be functional or nonfunctional, depending on whether they corrected against a functional alpha-globin gene in recent evolutionary history. The number of alpha-globin genes (including pseudogenes) appears to differ among species, although highly divergent pseudogenes may not have been detected in all species examined. Although matching sequences could be found in interspecies comparisons of the flanking regions of alpha- globin genes, these matches are not as extensive as those found in the flanking regions of mammalian beta-like globin genes. This observation suggests that the noncoding sequences in the mammalian alpha-globin gene clusters are evolving at a faster rate than those in the beta-like globin gene clusters. The proposed faster rate of evolution fits with the poor conservation of the genetic linkage map around alpha-globin gene clusters when compared to that of the beta-like globin gene clusters. Analysis of the 3' flanking regions of alpha-globin genes has revealed a conserved sequence approximately 100-150 bp 3' to the polyadenylation site; this sequence may be involved in the expression or regulation of alpha-globin genes.   相似文献   

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Murine erythroleukemic cells induced to differentiate in vitro with dimethylsulfoxide provide a model for events involved in the regulated expression of the globin genes. Here we examine alpha- and beta-globin gene expression in such cells which contain no detectable globin RNA prior to induction. To quantitate alpha- and beta-globin RNAs in cellular RNA samples by molecular hybridization techniques, highly radioactive complementary DNAs were synthesized using mouse alpha- and beta-globin RNAs purified by formamide gel electrophoresis. Maximally induced erythroleukemic cells and mouse reticulocytes contain nearly equal relative amounts of alpha- and beta-globin RNA. During the period in which globin RNA accumulates in differentiating erythroleukemic cells, however, alpha- and beta-globin RNAs are not present in equivalent amounts. alphaRNA is present in substantial excess (alpha/beta ratio 3.7) early in induction, and the alpha/beta RNA ratio progressively approaches 1 as differentiation proceeds further. These observations directly suggest that the alpha- and beta-globin genes are differentially expressed during cellular differentiation and raise questions as to how relative expression of globin genes is controlled during normal 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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