Two cis-acting regulatory elements are involved in the sucrose-inducible expression of the sporamin gene promoter from sweet potato in transgenic tobacco

Abstract
In this study, we generated transgenic tobacco plants that express the β-glucuronidase (GUS) gene under the control of the 305-bp 5′-upstream region of a gene coding for sporamin A of sweet potato. Expression of GUS in excised tobacco leaves was induced by sucrose, mimicking the sugar-inducible expression of the endogenous sporamin genes in sweet potato. Deletion of the sequences extending from position −305 (relative to the transcription start site) to −283 and from −146 to −87 resulted in an approximately 40-fold enhancement in GUS reporter expression. Furthermore, the sequence from −282 to −165 conferred sucrose-inducibility on the −89 core promoter of the Cauliflower Mosaic Virus 35S RNA gene. Analysis of internal deletions, linker scanning and the introduction of base substitutions in the sequence between positions −282 and −165 indicated that sucrose-responsiveness conferred by this region was dependent on the presence of two cis-acting elements, termed CMSREs (carbohydrate metabolite signal responsive elements) 1 and 2, which are separated by a spacer. A sequence similar or identical to the core of CMSRE-1 (TGGACGG) is also present in the promoters of several other sugar-inducible genes, and sequences encopassing the TGGACGG-related motifs from two of these could functionally replace the CMSRE-1 in the truncated sporamin A promoter. These results suggest that the TGGACGG element plays an important role in the sucrose-inducible expression of a group of plant genes.