Publication | Open Access
Human EZF, a Krüppel-like Zinc Finger Protein, Is Expressed in Vascular Endothelial Cells and Contains Transcriptional Activation and Repression Domains
185
Citations
35
References
1998
Year
Transcriptional RegulationCaccc MotifDevelopmental BiologySignaling PathwayCell RegulationMedicineCaccc Core SequenceRepression DomainsVascular BiologyGene ExpressionZinc Finger RegionCell BiologyCell SignalingCellular PhysiologyVascular Endothelial CellsGene FunctionHuman Ezf
Members of the erythroid Krüppel-like factor (EKLF) multigene family contain three C-terminal zinc fingers, and they are typically expressed in a limited number of tissues. EKLF, the founding member, transactivates the beta-globin promoter by binding to the CACCC motif. EKLF is essential for expression of the beta-globin gene as demonstrated by gene deletion experiments in mice. Using a DNA probe from the zinc finger region of EKLF, we cloned a cDNA encoding a member of this family from a human vascular endothelial cell cDNA library. Sequence analysis indicated that our clone, hEZF, is the human homologue of the recently reported mouse EZF and GKLF. hEZF is a single-copy gene that maps to chromosome 9q31. By gel mobility shift analysis, purified recombinant hEZF protein bound specifically to a probe containing the CACCC core sequence. In co-transfection experiments, we found that sense but not antisense hEZF decreased the activity of a reporter plasmid containing the CACCC sequence upstream of the thymidine kinase promoter by 6-fold. In contrast, EKLF increased the activity of the reporter plasmid by 3-fold. By fusing hEZF to the DNA-binding domain of GAL4, we mapped a repression domain in hEZF to amino acids 181-388. We also found that amino acids 91-117 of hEZF confer an activation function on the GAL4 DNA-binding domain.
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