Pancreatic beta-cell-type-specific expression of the rat insulin II gene is controlled by positive and negative cellular transcriptional elements.
Open Access
- 1 August 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 9 (8), 3253-3259
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.9.8.3253
Abstract
The insulin gene is expressed almost exclusively in pancreatic beta-cells. The DNA sequences that control cell-specific expression are located upstream of the transcription initiation site. To identify the cis-acting transcriptional control regions within the rat insulin II gene that are responsible for this tissue-specific expression pattern, we constructed a series of 5'-flanking deletion mutants and analyzed their expression in vivo in transfected insulin-producing and -nonproducing cell lines. Pancreatic beta-cell-specific expression was shown to be controlled by enhancer sequences lying between nucleotides -342 and -91 relative to the transcription start site. The rat insulin II enhancer appears to be a chimera, composed of a number of distinct cis-acting DNA elements. Both positive and negative transcriptional regulatory elements appear to be responsible for this cell-type-specific expression. We have shown that expression from one element within the enhancer, which is found between nucleotides -100 and -91, is regulated by both positive- and negative-acting cellular transcription factors. Expression from chimeras containing only the enhancer element sequences from -100 to -91 were active only in insulin-producing cells, indicating that the positive-acting factor(s) required for this activity may be active only in beta-cells. In contrast to the enhancer region, the rat insulin II gene promoter did not appear to require cell-specific transcription factors. Promoter mutants with 5'-flanking sequences extending to nucleotides -90 and -73 were constitutively active in both insulin-producing and -nonproducing cells. These results suggest that rat insulin II gene transcription in pancreatic beta-cells is imparted by a combination of both negative- and positive-acting cellular factors interacting with the gene enhancer.This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- How eukaryotic transcriptional activators workNature, 1988
- A High-Efficiency HeLa Cell Nuclear Transcription ExtractDNA, 1988
- Regulation of Inducible and Tissue-Specific Gene ExpressionScience, 1987
- Repression of the Immunoglobulin Heavy Chain Enhancer by the Adenovirus-2 E1A ProductsScience, 1985
- Adenovirus E1a proteins repress transcription from the SV40 early promoterCell, 1985
- Identification of two distinct regulatory regions adjacent to the human β-interferon geneCell, 1983
- Analysis of transcriptional regulatory signals of the HSV thymidine kinase gene: Identification of an upstream control regionCell, 1981
- Isolation of biologically active ribonucleic acid from sources enriched in ribonucleaseBiochemistry, 1979
- The structure and evolution of the two nonallelic rat preproinsulin genesCell, 1979
- Selective and accurate initiation of transcription at the ad2 major late promotor in a soluble system dependent on purified rna polymerase ii and dnaCell, 1979