1. A transcriptional enhancer located between adult beta-globin and embryonic epsilon-globin genes in chicken and duck
- Author
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Michael M. Müller, G. Farache, F. Weber, Klaus Scherrer, Walter Schaffner, L. Marcaud, Edgar Schreiber, and Androniki Kretsovali
- Subjects
animal structures ,Erythroblasts ,Transcription, Genetic ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Molecular cloning ,Biology ,Homology (biology) ,Conserved sequence ,Cell Line ,Plasmid ,Species Specificity ,Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid ,Genetics ,Animals ,Globin ,Enhancer ,Gene ,Expression vector ,Base Sequence ,General Medicine ,Molecular biology ,Biological Evolution ,Globins ,Ducks ,Enhancer Elements, Genetic ,Genes ,Chickens ,Plasmids - Abstract
We have detected a transcriptional enhancer sequence downstream from the adult beta-globin (beta A-globin) genes of chicken and duck. DNA segments from the beta-globin coding and flanking sequences were cloned into expression vectors containing the SV40 promoter linked to either the T antigen gene or the cat gene. The expression of these genes was measured in a chicken erythroid cell line transfected with the recombinant plasmids. We found that segments located about 400 bp downstream from the poly(A) site of both the chicken and duck beta A-globin genes (and about 1.5 kb upstream from the embryonic epsilon-globin gene) stimulate transcription of the test genes about five-fold. In chicken essentially the same segment was also found by others to act as an erythroid cell-specific enhancer [Hesse et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83 (1986) 4312-4316; Choi and Engel, Nature 323 (1986) 731-734]. The sequence containing this enhancer is conserved in evolution. A high degree of homology, reaching 84% in a segment 180 bp in length, was found between chicken and duck despite an evolutionary divergence of 70 myr.
- Published
- 1987