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

An NF1-like protein functions as a repressor of the von Willebrand factor promoter.

The expression of the von Willebrand factor ( vWf) gene is restricted to endothelial cells and megakaryocytes. We have previously reported the identification of a region of the vWf gene that regulates its cell-type-specific expression in cell culture. This region (spanning nucleotides -487 to +247) consists of a core promoter (spanning nucleotides -90 to +22), a positive regulatory region (spanning nucleotides +155 to +247), and a negative regulatory region spanning nucleotides -312 to -487. To identify the trans-acting factor(s) that interacts with the negative regulatory region, we carried out gel mobility and DNase1 footprint analyses of sequences -312 to -487. These analyses demonstrated that an NF1-like protein interacts with DNA sequences spanning -440 to -470 nucleotides in the negative regulatory region of the vWf promoter. Base substitution mutations of the NF1 binding site abolished the NF1-DNA interaction. Furthermore, mutation of the NF1 binding site in the promoter fragment (-487 to +155) that contained the core and the negative regulatory region resulted in activation of the mutant promoter in both endothelial and nonendothelial cells. The wild type promoter fragment (-487 to +155) was not activated in either cell type. These results demonstrate that an NF1-like protein functions as a repressor of vWf promoter activity. In contrast, the mutation of the same NF1 binding site, but now in the context of the larger 734-base pair endothelial cell-specific promoter fragment (-487 to +247), did not result in promoter activation in nonendothelial cells. The data indicate that there are additional repressor elements within the vWf promoter region suppressing its activity specifically, in nonendothelial cells, and suggest that there is a secondary repressor element(s) that is located in the terminal region of the first exon of this gene.[1]

References

  1. An NF1-like protein functions as a repressor of the von Willebrand factor promoter. Jahroudi, N., Ardekani, A.M., Greenberger, J.S. J. Biol. Chem. (1996) [Pubmed]
 
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