101. Differential transactivation potential of Oct1 and Oct2 is determined by additional B cell-specific activities.
- Author
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Pfisterer P, Annweiler A, Ullmer C, Corcoran LM, and Wirth T
- Subjects
- Animals, Enhancer Elements, Genetic genetics, Host Cell Factor C1, Mice, Octamer Transcription Factor-1, Octamer Transcription Factor-2, Promoter Regions, Genetic genetics, Protein Binding, Transfection, B-Lymphocytes physiology, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Transcription Factors metabolism, Transcriptional Activation
- Abstract
Cell type-specific transcriptional regulation is generally believed to be mediated by sequence-specific transcription factors that are specifically present in the corresponding cells. The interaction of the lymphoid-specific Oct2 transcription factor has been thought to be responsible for the B cell-specific activity of octamer-containing promoter and enhancer elements. Here we show that physiological concentrations of Oct2 do not suffice to generate octamer-dependent promoter activity in non-B cell lines. Furthermore, we have tested the activity of octamer-dependent promoter and enhancer elements in B cell lines that lack the endogenous Oct2 protein. Our results demonstrate that in these Oct2-deficient B cells the ubiquitous endogenous Oct1 protein is able to stimulate octamer-containing promoters to a level comparable with that of normal Oct2-positive B cells. However, reporter constructs bearing the octamer motif in a distal enhancer position are not stimulated by the Oct1 protein, but do require the presence of Oct2. The B cell-specific octamer-dependent promoter activity mediated by Oct1 correlates with the presence of a novel B cell-specific octamer-binding complex containing the Oct1 protein. From these results we conclude that B cells contain two different activities: one that interacts with both Oct1 and Oct2 and mediates promoter proximal activity of the octamer motif and a second that specifically interacts with Oct2 to confer function from a remote enhancer position.
- Published
- 1994
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