1. Characterization of the Autographa californica nucleopolyhedrovirus ubiquitin gene promoter.
- Author
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Lin XA, Chen Y, Xu WH, Yi YZ, and Zhang ZF
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Conserved Sequence, DNA Mutational Analysis, DNA Primers, Sequence Alignment, Sequence Deletion, Viral Proteins genetics, Moths virology, Nucleopolyhedroviruses genetics, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Transcription, Genetic, Ubiquitin genetics
- Abstract
Autographa californica multicapsid nucleopolyhedrovirus (AcMNPV) encodes an ubiquitin protein, which may be involved in virus infection. Functional analysis of the AcMNPV ubiquitin promoter was performed by progressive deletion of sequence or mutation of putative cis-activating motifs in the promoter region. In the presence of viral factors, a transient expression assay demonstrated that the active regions responsive to promoter transcription are mainly located within the range of -595 to -382 bp upstream of ATG. A 196-bp fragment (-383 to -187 bp), consisting of the distal TAAG, CAAT motif and TATA box, could also drive the expression of a reporter gene. Site-directed mutagenesis analyses indicated that mutations of TATA boxes and TAAG motifs reduce the promoter activity remarkably, while CAAT mutations enhance the promoter activity by about 3- or 4-fold as compared to the native promoter. All the results suggested that two continuous promoter regions are involved in the transcription of the ubiquitin gene and the cis-activating motifs corresponding to viral factors are mainly present within the 5' region of the promoter. In addition, CAAT motifs in the promoter region function as negative regulator(s) binding sites.
- Published
- 2008
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