Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2817996 Gene 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Raver2 is a putative modulator of the activity of the polypyrimidine-tract binding protein (PTB), one of the most intensively studied splicing repressors. Little is known about Raver2 expression, and all current data is from mice where it shows tissue specificity. In the present study, by comparing Raver2 transcript expression in human and mouse tissues, we found that human Raver2 is ubiquitously expressed in adult tissues. In order to investigate human Raver2 transcription regulation, we identified and characterized a putative promoter region in a 1000 bp region upstream of the transcription starting site of the gene. Dual luciferase reporter assays demonstrated that this region had promoter activity conferred by the first 160 bp. By mutagenic analyses of putative cis-acting regulatory sequences, we identified an individual site that decreased the promoter activity by up to 40% when mutated. Together, our results suggest that regulation of human Raver2 expression involves TATA-less transcriptional activity.

► We have analyzed the Raver2 gene expression. ► The human and mouse Raver2 genes are divergent in tissue transcript expression. ► We have characterized the human Raver2 5′-flanking region for promoter function. ► The proximal promoter region with maximal activity is within the first 300 bp. ► The human Raver2 gene lacks a canonical TATA box.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Genetics
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