Publication | Open Access
Transcription from a murine T-cell receptor V beta promoter depends on a conserved decamer motif similar to the cyclic AMP response element.
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References
1989
Year
Molecular RegulationGeneticsMolecular BiologyGene Regulatory NetworkRegulatory RegionGene TranscriptionTranscriptional RegulationCellular Regulatory MechanismCell SignalingTranscription FactorsMolecular PhysiologyTransient Transfection AssaysReceptor (Biochemistry)Gene ExpressionConserved Decamer MotifCell BiologyTranscription RegulationSignal TransductionV Beta TranscriptionNatural SciencesGene RegulationCellular Immune ResponseSystems BiologyMedicine
We identified a regulatory region of the murine V beta promoter by both in vivo and in vitro analyses. The results of transient transfection assays indicated that the dominant transcription-activating element within the V beta 8.3 promoter is the palindromic motif identified previously as the conserved V beta decamer. Elimination of this element, by linear deletion or specific mutation, reduced transcriptional activity from this promoter by 10-fold. DNase I footprinting, gel mobility shift, and methylation interference assays confirmed that the palindrome acts as the binding site of a specific nuclear factor. In particular, the V beta promoter motif functioned in vitro as a high-affinity site for a previously characterized transcription activator, ATF. A consensus cyclic AMP response element (CRE) but not a consensus AP-1 site, can substitute for the decamer in vivo. These data suggest that cyclic AMP response element-binding protein (ATF/CREB) or related proteins activate V beta transcription.
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