Concepedia

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Nucleotide sequence of the gene coding for human factor VII, a vitamin K-dependent protein participating in blood coagulation.

308

Citations

41

References

1987

Year

TLDR

Factor VIIa is a vitamin‑K dependent serine protease that initiates blood coagulation, and its exons encode conserved domains while intron patterns resemble those of other vitamin‑K dependent coagulation factors. The authors isolated and characterized two overlapping genomic clones that encode the human factor VII gene. The complete 12.8‑kb gene was mapped, revealing alternative splicing that produces two transcripts (one with an extended pre‑pro leader), a single AAUAAA polyadenylation signal with multiple polyadenylation sites, and five tandem‑repeat regions that constitute a substantial portion of introns and the 3′ UTR.

Abstract

Activated factor VII (factor VIIa) is a vitamin K-dependent plasma serine protease that participates in a cascade of reactions leading to the coagulation of blood. Two overlapping genomic clones containing sequences encoding human factor VII were isolated and characterized. The complete sequence of the gene was determined and found to span about 12.8 kilobases. The mRNA for factor VII as demonstrated by cDNA cloning is polyadenylylated at multiple sites but contains only one AAUAAA poly(A) signal sequence. The mRNA can undergo alternative splicing, forming one transcript containing eight segments as exons and another with an additional exon that encodes a larger prepro leader sequence. The latter transcript has no known counterpart in the other vitamin K-dependent proteins. The positions of the introns with respect to the amino acid sequence encoded by the eight essential exons of factor VII are the same as those present in factor IX, factor X, protein C, and the first three exons of prothrombin. These exons code for domains generally conserved among members of this gene family. The comparable introns in these genes, however, are dissimilar with respect to size and sequence, with the exception of intron C in factor VII and protein C. The gene for factor VII also contains five regions made up of tandem repeats of oligonucleotide monomer elements. More than a quarter of the intron sequences and more than a third of the 3' untranslated portion of the mRNA transcript consist of these minisatellite tandem repeats.

References

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