Immediate upstream sequence of arrestin directs rod-specific expression in Xenopus. (49/1876)

Arrestins are a family of proteins that modulate G protein-coupled receptor responses with distinct arrestin genes expressed in rods and cones. To understand the regulatory mechanisms controlling rod-specific expression, the abundant Xenopus rod arrestin cDNA and a partial genomic clone, containing the immediate upstream region and amino terminus of the polypeptide, have been characterized. The deduced polypeptide has approximately 69% identity to other vertebrate rod arrestins. Southern blot analysis and polymerase chain reaction of intronic sequences demonstrated multiple alleles for rod arrestin. DNase I footprinting with retinal proteins revealed four major DNA binding sites in the proximal promoter, coinciding with consensus sequences reported in mammalian promoters. Purified bovine Crx homeodomain and mouse Nrl proteins protected a number of these sites. A dual approach of transient embryo transfections and transgenesis was used to locate transcriptional control sequences essential for rod-specific expression in Xenopus. Constructs containing -1287/+113 of 5' upstream sequence with or without intron 1 directed high level expression, specifically in rods. A construct containing only -287/+113 directed expression of green fluorescent protein solely in rod cells. These results suggest that the Crx and Nrl binding sites in the proximal promoter are the primary cis-acting sequences regulating arrestin gene expression in rods.  (+info)

B cell-specific activator protein prevents two activator factors from binding to the immunoglobulin J chain promoter until the antigen-driven stages of B cell development. (50/1876)

The immunoglobulin J chain gene is inducibly transcribed in mature B cells upon antigen recognition and a signal from interleukin-2 (IL-2). B cell-specific activator protein (BSAP), a transcription factor that silences J chain transcription, has been identified as a nuclear target of the IL-2 signal. The levels of BSAP progressively decrease in response to IL-2 and this change correlates with the differentiation of B cells into antibody secreting plasma cells. Here we report the binding of the upstream stimulatory factor (USF) to an E-box motif immediately upstream from the BSAP site on the J chain promoter. Mutations in the USF binding motif significantly decrease J chain promoter activity in J chain expressing B cell lines. We also show that a functional relationship exists between USF and a second J chain positive-regulating factor, B-MEF2, using co-immunoprecipitation assays and transfections. Finally, we provide evidence that the binding of BSAP prevents USF and B-MEF2 from interacting with the J chain promoter during the antigen-independent stages of B cell development. It is not until the levels of BSAP decrease during the antigen-driven stages of B cell development that both USF and B-MEF2 are able to bind to their respective promoter elements and activate J chain transcription.  (+info)

Binding of oligopyrimidines to the RNA hairpin responsible for the ribosome gag-pol frameshift in HIV-1. (51/1876)

The 12 bp stem of the RNA hairpin responsible for the gag-pol frameshifting of the ribosomes during translation of the polycistronic HIV-1 mRNA has a pyrimidine-rich 5' strand and, consequently, a purine-rich 3' strand. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays have shown that DNA oligopyrimidines, 12 and 20 nucleotides long (but not oligopurines or G,T-containing oligomers), designed to form triplexes actually bind to the double-stranded RNA target. RNase V1 footprinting studies have confirmed the interaction between the hairpin stem and the RNA and 2'-O-methyl oligoribonucleotide analogues of the 12-mer oligodeoxypyrimidine as well as 5 propynyl,cytosine, containing the 12-mer oligodeoxypyrimidine, bind more strongly to the RNA target than the unmodified parent DNA oligomer. The complexes formed by the RNA hairpin and either the 12-mer oligodeoxypyrimidine or the 20-mer oligopyrimidine are stable at a neutral pH and in the absence of Mg2+ but blocked neither the reverse transcription nor cell-free translation of a RNA template in which the gag-pol frameshifting hairpin was inserted at the 5' end of the luciferase open reading frame.  (+info)

Selective activation of the probasin androgen-responsive region by steroid hormones. (52/1876)

Glucocorticoid and androgen receptors have been shown to function through the same palindromic glucocorticoid response element (GRE) and yet have differential effects on gene transcription. In this study, we examined the functional and structural relationship of the androgen and glucocorticoid receptors with the androgen responsive region (ARR) of the probasin (PB) gene containing two androgen receptor binding sites, ARBS-1 and ARBS-2. Transfection studies indicated that one copy of each cis-acting DNA element was essential for maximal androgen-induced chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) activity and that androgen selectivity was maintained when multiple copies of the minimal wild type (wt) androgen responsive region containing both ARBS-1 and ARBS-2 (-244 to -96) were subcloned in front of the thymidine kinase promoter. Furthermore, replacing the androgen response region with 1, 2 or 3 copies of either ARBS-1 or ARBS-2 restored less than 4% of the biological activity seen with the wt PB ARR. Multiple copies of either ARBS-1 or ARBS-2 did not result in glucocorticoid-induced CAT gene activity. By comparison, 1 or 2 copies of the tyrosine aminotransferase (TAT) GRE, as well as the mouse mammary tumour virus GRE, were strong inducers of CAT activity in response to both androgen and glucocorticoid treatment. In addition, band shift assays demonstrated that although the synthetic glucocorticoid receptor, GR-DNA binding domain (GR-DBD), and the synthetic androgen receptor, AR2, could interact with the TAT GRE (dissociation constants Kd of 63.9 and 14.1 respectively), only AR2 but not GR-DBD binding could be detected on ARBS-1 and ARBS-2. Our findings provide further evidence that androgen-induced regulation of gene transcription can occur through androgen-specific DNA binding sites that are distinct from the common GRE.  (+info)

Role of multiple CytR binding sites on cooperativity, competition, and induction at the Escherichia coli udp promoter. (53/1876)

The CytR repressor fulfills dual roles as both a repressor of transcription from promoters of the Escherichia coli CytR regulon and a co-activator in some circumstances. Transcription is repressed by a three-protein complex (cAMP receptor protein (CRP)-CytR-CRP) that is stabilized by cooperative interactions between CRP and CytR. However, cooperativity also means that CytR can recruit CRP and, by doing so, can act as a co-activator. The central role of cooperativity in regulation is highlighted by the fact that binding of the inducer, cytidine, to CytR is coupled to CytR-CRP cooperativity; this underlies the mechanism for induction. Similar interactions at the different promoters of the CytR regulon coordinate expression of the transport proteins and enzymes required for nucleoside catabolism but also provide differential expression of these genes. A fundamental question in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic gene regulation is how combinatorial mechanisms of this sort regulate differential expression. Recently, we showed that CytR binds specifically to multiple sites in the E. coli deoP promoter, thereby providing competition for CRP binding to CRP operator site 1 (CRP1) and CRP2 as well as cooperativity. The effect of the competition at this promoter is to negate the role of CytR in recruiting CRP. Here, we have used quantitative footprint and mobility shift analysis to investigate CRP and CytR binding to the E. coli udp promoter. Here too, we find that CytR both cooperates and competes for CRP binding. However, consistent with both the distribution of CytR recognition motifs in the sequence of the promoter and the regulation of the promoter, the competition is limited to CRP2. When cytidine binds to CytR, the effect on cooperativity is very different at the udp promoter than at the deoP2 promoter. Cooperativity with CRP at CRP1 is nearly eliminated, but the effect on CytR-CRP2 cooperativity is negligible. These results are discussed in relation to the current structural model of CytR in which the core, inducer-binding domain is tethered to the helix-turn-helix, DNA-binding domain via flexible peptide linkers.  (+info)

Characterization of the transcriptional activator CBF1 from Arabidopsis thaliana. Evidence for cold denaturation in regions outside of the DNA binding domain. (54/1876)

A transcriptional activator, CBF1, from Arabidopsis thaliana, which has the AP2 domain for DNA binding and regulates the cold acclimation response, was overexpressed in Escherichia coli, purified, and characterized. Analyses of the interaction between CBF1 and the C-repeat/dehydration-responsive element by fluorescence measurement showed that CBF1 binds to C-repeat/dehydration-responsive element as a monomer irrespective of the temperature. CD spectra of the intact and truncated CBF1 proteins (1-213, 41-213, 41-157, and 41-146) were measured to examine the temperature-dependent changes of the secondary structure of CBF1. The results suggested that the CBF1 protein has regions exhibiting reversible cold denaturation in the range between 30 and -5 degrees C and also has a region exhibiting thermal denaturation between 40 and 60 degrees C. This cold denaturation occurred in both the N-terminal and acidic regions. The thermal denaturation occurred in the region encompassing the AP2 domain. The difference between the retention time of CBF1 at 4 degrees C and that at 25 degrees C in gel filtration, and the decrease of the sedimentation coefficient, s20,w, caused by the temperature change from 25 to 3 degrees C, strongly suggested that the cold denaturation was accompanied by the extension of the molecule. The possible cold denaturation observed here might be a physiologically important structural response of CBF1 to cold stress.  (+info)

Transcriptional control of the iron-responsive fxbA gene by the mycobacterial regulator IdeR. (55/1876)

Exochelin is the primary extracellular siderophore of Mycobacterium smegmatis, and the iron-regulated fxbA gene encodes a putative formyltransferase, an essential enzyme in the exochelin biosynthetic pathway (E. H. Fiss, Y. Yu, and W. R. Jacobs, Jr., Mol. Microbiol. 14:557-569, 1994). We investigated the regulation of fxbA by the mycobacterial IdeR, a homolog of the Corynebacterium diphtheriae iron regulator DtxR (M. P. Schmitt, M. Predich, L. Doukhan, I. Smith, and R. K. Holmes, Infect. Immun. 63:4284-4289, 1995). Gel mobility shift experiments showed that IdeR binds to the fxbA regulatory region in the presence of divalent metals. DNase I footprinting assays indicated that IdeR binding protects a 28-bp region containing a palindromic sequence of the fxbA promoter that was identified in primer extension assays. fxbA regulation was measured in M. smegmatis wild-type and ideR mutant strains containing fxbA promoter-lacZ fusions. These experiments confirmed that fxbA expression is negatively regulated by iron and showed that inactivation of ideR results in iron-independent expression of fxbA. However, the levels of its expression in the ideR mutant were approximately 50% lower than those in the wild-type strain under iron limitation, indicating an undefined positive role of IdeR in the regulation of fxbA.  (+info)

Characterisation of holoenzyme lacking sigmaN regions I and II. (56/1876)

The sigma-N (sigmaN) protein associates with bacterial core RNA polymerase to form a holoenzyme that is silent for transcription in the absence of enhancer-binding activator proteins. Here we show that the acidic Region II of sigmaN from Klebsiella pneumoniae is dispensable for polymerase isomerisation and trans-cription under conditions where the inhibited state of the holoenzyme is relieved by removal of sigmaN Region I sequences. Holoenzymes lacking Region I or Regions I+II were equally susceptible to the order of addition-dependent inhibition or stabilisation of DNA binding afforded by in trans Region I sequences. Region I+II-deleted [sigma] formed a holoenzyme with a DNA-binding activity more susceptible to inhibition by non-specific DNA than that lacking Region I. Region II sequences appear more closely associated with formation of a holoenzyme and [sigma] proficient in DNA binding than with changes in holoenzyme conformation needed for unmasking a single-strand DNA-binding activity used for open complex for-mation. Region II may therefore function to optimise DNA interactions for an efficient sigma cycle.  (+info)