THE CLONED PROMOTER OF THE HUMAN DNA BETA-POLYMERASE GENE CONTAINS A CAMP RESPONSE ELEMENT FUNCTIONAL IN HELA-CELLS

被引:15
作者
ENGLANDER, EW
WILSON, SH
机构
[1] Laboratory of Biochemistry, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda
关键词
D O I
10.1089/dna.1992.11.61
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The mammalian DNA beta-polymerase (beta-pol) gene is constitutively expressed in cultured cells as a function of growth stage and DNA replication, but is expressed in rodents in a tissue-specific fashion. As revealed by transient expression experiments with wild-type and mutated beta-pol promoter fusion genes, the cloned human beta-pol promoter is transcriptionally regulated by signals acting through the single palindromic sequence (GTGACGTCAC) known as an ATF/CRE-binding site centered at position -45 in the core promoter. Although the mere presence of the ATF/CRE palindromic sequence in a promoter does not always confer cAMP responsiveness or protein binding over and around the ATF/CRE sequence, we find that agents that increase cAMP levels (forskolin and IBMX) in HeLa cells activate the beta-pol promoter; activation also can be observed by coexpression of the protein kinase A catalytic subunit. Experiments with mutagenized beta-pol promoters indicate that the ATF/CRE-binding site mediates these effects. Thus, the ATF/CRE-binding site in the context of this TATA-less constitutive promoter is able to respond to the kinase A signal transduction pathway.
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页码:61 / 69
页数:9
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