Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2819949 | Gene | 2007 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Elongation factor 2 (EF-2) plays a key role in the essential process of protein synthesis by translocating tRNAs from the ribosomal A- and P-sites to the P- and E-sites. EF-2 regulates the outcome of protein synthesis in mammalian cells. This report demonstrates that chicken EF-2 protein levels are dependent on transcription in 8-bromo-cAMP, insulin and phorbol ester-treated cells. In order to delineate functional domains that control chicken EF-2 gene transcription, the 5â²-flanking region of the chicken EF-2 promoter was analyzed. Deletion constructs from â 550 and â 86 had the same basal level promoter activity as the whole EF-2 promoter. The sequence between nucleotides â 700 and â 550 was determined to be a regulatory region for the chicken EF-2 basal promoter activity. The region between â 700 and â 550 has a negative regulatory region and two regulatory proteins (I, II). 8-bromo-cAMP increased chicken EF-2 promoter activity (â 700/+ 102) in Rat 1 HIR fibroblast cells more than insulin and phorbol ester treatment. Binding of protein I and II were decreased by 8-bromo-cAMP but restored by a protein kinase A inhibitor (KT5720). GATA consensus sequence oligonucleotide and fragment â 86/â 50 prevented protein II binding of fragment â 700/â 550. This result suggested that protein II is a GATA-like protein. These observations provide a novel regulatory mechanism for the EF-2 promoter.
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Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Genetics
Authors
Eun Jin Lim, Choong Won Kim,