Publication | Open Access
DNA looping and Sp1 multimer links: a mechanism for transcriptional synergism and enhancement.
259
Citations
38
References
1991
Year
GeneticsGenomic MechanismMolecular BiologySplicing VariantDna LoopingTranscriptional RegulationRemote Sp1Proximal ElementsGene StructureTranscription FactorsMedicineDna ReplicationGene ExpressionCell BiologyChromatinNatural SciencesLocal Sp1Gene RegulationSystems BiologyTranscription RegulationTranscriptional Synergism
Using conventional and scanning transmission electron microscopy, we have examined the physical basis of long-range enhancer effects between distal and proximal elements in a eukaryotic promoter. Specifically, we have studied binding of human transcription factor Sp1 to 10-base-pair G+C-rich elements ("GC boxes") located at -100 and +1700 relative to the RNA start site. It was previously observed that the distantly located site functions in synergism with the promoter-proximal site to strongly activate transcription in vivo. Here we demonstrate that this synergism is likely to be a direct consequence of interactions between remote and local Sp1, the remote Sp1 translocated to the promoter by a DNA loop. Scanning transmission electron microscopy shows that Sp1 initially forms a tetramer and subsequently assembles multiple tetramers stacked in register at the DNA loop juncture. This unexpected finding not only provides the physical basis for loop formation but also defines a biological process leading to strongly increased concentration of activator protein at the promoter. The mechanism may unify the problem of transcriptional activation by removing enhancer action as a separate class of regulatory activity.
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