Comparison of promoter suppression in avian and murine retrovirus vectors
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Nucleic Acids Research
- Vol. 14 (23) , 9381-9396
- https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/14.23.9381
Abstract
Previously, we described "promoter suppression" in infectious retrovirus vectors with two genes and an internal promoter. Here, we examined several parameters of promoter suppression and found that the amount of suppression in an integrated retrovirus vector was dependent both on whether the vector was derived from spleen necrosis virus or murine leukemia virus and on which internal promoter was present in the vector. Murine leukemia virus vectors showed less suppression than analogous spleen necrosis virus vectors. Furthermore, the amount of suppression was not dependent on either the relative strengths of the promoters nor the distance between the promoters. Moreover, we found that in vectors in which one promoter was suppressed, there was an inverse correlation between the DNaseI sensitivity of the chromatin surrounding a promoter and the suppression of its expression.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Retrovirus insertion inactivates mouse α 1(I) collagen gene by blocking initiation of transcriptionNature, 1986
- Assembly and propagation of repressed and derepressed chromosomal statesCell, 1985
- Infectious and Selectable Retrovirus Containing an Inducible Rat Growth Hormone MinigeneScience, 1984
- Transformation mediated by the SV40 T antigens: Separation of the overlapping SV40 early genes with a retroviral vectorCell, 1984
- Retrovirus-induced lethal mutation in collagen I gene of mice is associated with an altered chromatin structureCell, 1984
- Transmission of the polyoma virus middle T gene as the oncogene of a murine retrovirusNature, 1984
- Induction of altered chromatin structures by simian virus 40 enhancer and promoter elementsNature, 1984
- Hb switching in chickensCell, 1980
- Interaction in vivo between strong closely spaced constitutive promotersJournal of Molecular Biology, 1979
- Biochemical Studies on the Herpes Simplex Virus-specified Deoxypyrimidine Kinase ActivityJournal of General Virology, 1974