Publication | Open Access
HNF-3A, a hepatocyte-enriched transcription factor of novel structure is regulated transcriptionally.
469
Citations
25
References
1990
Year
Molecular RegulationKnown Transcription FactorMolecular BiologyTranscriptional RegulationSignaling PathwayProtein ExpressionCell SignalingTranscription FactorsNovel StructureProtein FunctionLiver PhysiologyGene ExpressionCell BiologyLiverTranscription RegulationDna BindingNatural SciencesLiver Nuclear ExtractsGene RegulationHepatocyte-enriched Transcription FactorSystems BiologyMedicine
Hepatocyte-specific gene expression requires the interaction of many proteins with multiple binding sites in the regulatory regions. HNF-3 is a site found to be important in the maximal hepatocyte-specific expression of several genes. We find that liver nuclear extracts contain three major binding activities for this site, which we call HNF-3A, HNF-3B, and HNF-3C. Purification from rat liver nuclear extracts of HNF-3A and HNF-3C reveals that each activity corresponds to a distinct polypeptide, as determined by SDS-PAGE. Peptide sequence derived from the most abundant species, HNF-3A, was used for synthesizing probes with which to isolate a cDNA clone of this protein. The encoded protein contains 466 amino acids (48.7 kD) and has binding properties identical to those of the purified protein. A 160-amino-acid region that does not resemble the binding domain of any known transcription factor is essential for DNA binding. The mRNA for HNF-3A is present in the rat liver but not in brain, kidney, intestine, or spleen, and the basis for this difference is cell-specific regulation of HNF-3A gene transcription.
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