Publication | Open Access
Cyclin A Expression Is under Negative Transcriptional Control during the Cell Cycle
107
Citations
67
References
1996
Year
Transcriptional RegulationSystems BiologyExpression IsCell RegulationCell DivisionNatural SciencesMolecular BiologyCell ProliferationNegative Transcriptional ControlCell CycleGene ExpressionMedicineCell Biology
Transcription of the gene coding for cyclin A, a protein required for S-phase transit, is cell cycle regulated and is restricted to proliferating cells. To further explore transcriptional regulation linked to cell division cycle control, a genomic clone containing 5' flanking sequences of the murine cyclin A gene was isolated. When it was fused to a luciferase reporter gene, it was shown to function as a proliferation-regulated promoter in NIH 3T3 cells. Transcription of the mouse cyclin A gene is negatively regulated by arrest of cell proliferation. A mutation of a GC-rich sequence conserved between mice and humans is sufficient to relieve transcriptional repression, resulting in a promoter with constitutively high activity. In agreement with this result, in vivo footprinting reveals a protection of the cell cycle-responsive element in G0/early G1 cells which is not observed at later stages of the cell cycle. Moreover, the footprint is present in dimethyl sulfoxide-induced differentiating and not in proliferating Friend erythroleukemia cells. Conversely, two other sites, which in vitro bind ATF-1 and NF-Y, respectively, are constitutively occupied throughout cell cycle progression.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1