Publication | Open Access
In vitro mutagenesis and transcriptional analysis of a mouse ribosomal promoter element.
73
Citations
22
References
1984
Year
Transcriptional AnalysisGeneticsMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsGene TranscriptionTranscriptional RegulationRna PolymeraseGene StructureVitro MutagenesisRna ProcessingDna ReplicationRibosomal Rna GenesGene ExpressionCell BiologyTranscription RegulationNatural SciencesGene RegulationMedicineGenome EditingControl RegionMutagenesis
An RNA polymerase I control region essential for initiation of pre-rRNA transcription has been identified by mutagenesis in vitro of mouse rDNA (ribosomal RNA genes) and transcription in a cell-free system derived from Ehrlich ascites cells. Substitution of nucleotides between -35 and -14 by foreign DNA sequences caused a loss of template activity, which indicates that an important promoter element is located within this region. To identify the nucleotides essential for RNA polymerase I function, single and multiple point mutations within this control region were generated and the modified DNAs were assayed for template activity. The phenotypes of mutants in which C-to-T transitions have been introduced at positions -36, -31, -27, -22, -21, and -13 were identical to the wild type. Conversion of G to A at position -15 resulted in a 20% increase of promoter activity, whereas a G-to-A transition at -16 decreased transcription by 95%. Competition experiments between mutant and wild-type DNAs suggest that the guanine at -16, which is evolutionarily highly conserved, interacts with essential components of the transcription apparatus.
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