Protein-Binding Sites in Ig Gene Enhancers Determine Transcriptional Activity and Inducibility
- 19 June 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 236 (4808) , 1573-1577
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.3109035
Abstract
Individual protein-binding sites within the mouse immunoglobulin heavy chain and kappa light chain gene enhancers were altered, making it possible to examine the functional role of the sites during transcription. The E motifs, which bind factors that are present in many if not all cells, mostly behave as transcriptional activating sites. The only known heavy chain enhancer site that binds a lymphocyte-specific factor, the "octamer" site, plays a critical role in transcription but only in a truncated form of the enhancer. In the full enhancer, no one site is crucial because of an apparent functional redundancy. The site in the kappa enhancer that binds a factor specific to mature B cells, kappa B, was crucial to the constitutive activity of the enhancer in B cells. This factor is also inducible in pre-B cells, and the site was necessary for inducibility of the kappa enhancer. Thus, the sites defined by protein binding are important for the functional activity of immunoglobulin enhancers, with the sites that bind proteins restricted in their cellular distribution playing the most important roles.This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cooperation between T and B Cells. A Minimal ModelImmunological Reviews, 1987
- A lymphoid-specific protein binding to the octamer motif of immunoglobulin genesNature, 1986
- Multiple nuclear factors interact with the immunoglobulin enhancer sequencesCell, 1986
- Distinct factors bind to apparently homolgous sequences in the immunoglobulin heavy-chain enhancerNature, 1986
- Cell-type specificity of iminunoglobulin gene expression is regulated by at least three DNA sequence elementsCell, 1985
- Cell-type-specific contacts to immunoglobulin enhancers in nucleiNature, 1985
- Immunoglobulin Heavy-Chain Enhancer Requires One or More Tissue-Specific FactorsScience, 1985
- Specific interaction between enhancer-containing molecules and cellular componentsCell, 1984
- Immunoglobulin gene transcription is activated by downstream sequence elementsCell, 1983
- Continuing kappa-gene rearrangement in a cell line transformed by Abelson murine leukemia virusCell, 1982