GATA-1 transcription is controlled by distinct regulatory mechanisms during primitive and definitive erythropoiesis
- Ko Onodera*,
- Satoru Takahashi†,
- Shigeko Nishimura†,
- Jun Ohta*,†,
- Hozumi Motohashi†,
- Kentaro Yomogida†,
- Norio Hayashi*,
- James Douglas Engel‡, and
- Masayuki Yamamoto†,§
- *Department of Biochemistry, Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai 980-77, Japan; †Center for Tsukuba Advanced Research Alliance and Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba 305, Japan; and ‡Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, and Cell Biology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208-3500
Abstract
Transcription factor GATA-1 is required for the terminal differentiation of both the primitive and definitive erythroid cell lineages, and yet the regulatory mechanisms of GATA-1 itself are not well understood. To clarify how the GATA-1 gene is transcriptionally controlled in vivo, presumptive regulatory regions of the gene were tested by fusion to a reporter gene and then examined in transgenic mice. We found that a transcriptional control element located between −3.9 and −2.6 kb 5′ to the erythroid first exon serves as an activating element and that this sequence alone is sufficient to recapitulate the expression of GATA-1 (but uniquely in primitive erythroid cells). Addition of sequences from the GATA-1 first intron to this upstream element provides a necessary and sufficient condition for complete recapitulation of GATA-1 expression in both primitive and definitive erythroid cells. The first intron element does not possess intrinsic transcriptional activation potential when linked to the GATA-1 gene promoter but rather requires the upstream activating element for its activity. These experiments show that GATA-1 gene expression is regulated by discrete transcriptional control elements during definitive and primitive erythropoiesis: The 5′ element displays properties anticipated for a primitive erythroid cell-specific activating element, and the novel element within the GATA-1 first intron specifically augments this activity in definitive erythroid cells.
Footnotes
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↵ § To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: masiya{at}igaku.md.tsukuba.ac.jp.
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Bernard Roizman, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL
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Data deposition: The sequence reported in this paper has been deposited in the GenBank database (accession no. AB000965).
- ABBREVIATIONS:
- IT,
- testis-specific promoter and first exon;
- IE,
- erythroid-specific promoter and first exon;
- X-Gal,
- 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl β-d-galactoside;
- dpc,
- days postcoitus
- Copyright © 1997, The National Academy of Sciences of the USA








