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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Nucleotide sequence analysis of the approximately 35-kb segment containing interferon-gamma-inducible mouse proteasome activator genes.

The proteasome activator PA28 is an interferon-gamma-inducible complex made up of two related subunits, named PA28 alpha and PA28 beta, with approximately 50% amino acid sequence identity. Accumulated evidence indicates that binding of this complex to the 20S proteasome enhances the generation of class I-binding peptides. Previously, we showed that the genes coding for PA28 alpha and PA28 beta, designated Psme1 and Psme2, respectively, are located approximately 6 kb apart with their 3' ends pointing toward each other on mouse Chromosome 14. In the present study, we sequenced the regions adjacent to Psme1 and Psme2. In a contiguous stretch of approximately 35 kb, we identified six genes arranged in the following order: Cg10671-like (a gene similar to Drosophila CG10671)-Psme1-Cgi112 (a ubiquitously expressed gene with no known function)-Psme2-Flj10111 (a gene coding for a protein with two RING finger domains)-Isgf3g (an interferon-gamma-inducible gene coding for an interferon-dependent, positive-acting transcription factor 3 gamma). Interestingly, the 3' untranslated region of Psme1 overlaps with that of Cgi112 by 7 bp. Database analysis indicates that the corresponding human genes also overlap by up to 7 bp in their 3' untranslated regions. The 5' end of the mouse, but not the human, gene coding for PA28 beta undergoes alternative splicing that is predicted to alter the N-terminal amino acid sequence. Comparison of the mouse sequence with a human draft sequence deposited in the NCBI database revealed that the overall organization of the region coding for the interferon-gamma-inducible proteasome activator is conserved between human and mouse.[1]

References

  1. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the approximately 35-kb segment containing interferon-gamma-inducible mouse proteasome activator genes. Yawata, M., Murata, S., Tanaka, K., Ishigatsubo, Y., Kasahara, M. Immunogenetics (2001) [Pubmed]
 
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