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

Regulation of zinc homeostasis in yeast by binding of the ZAP1 transcriptional activator to zinc-responsive promoter elements.

Zinc homeostasis in yeast is controlled primarily through the regulation of zinc uptake. Transcription of the ZRT1 and ZRT2 zinc transporters increases in zinc-limited cells, and this induction is dependent on the ZAP1 gene. We hypothesized previously that ZAP1 encodes a zinc-responsive transcriptional activator. Expression of ZAP1 itself increases in zinc-limited cells. This response is also dependent on ZAP1 function through a potential positive autoregulatory mechanism. In this report, we describe the characterization of zinc-responsive elements (ZREs) in the promoters of the ZRT1, ZRT2, and ZAP1 genes. A ZRE consensus sequence, 5'-ACCYYNAAGGT-3', was identified and found to be both necessary and sufficient for zinc-responsive transcriptional regulation. We also demonstrate that ZREs are DNA binding sites for ZAP1. First, a dominant ZAP1 mutation, ZAP1-1(up), which causes increased expression of ZAP1-regulated genes in zinc-replete cells, exerted its effects specifically through the ZREs. Second, electrophoretic mobility shift assays and in vitro DNase I footprint analyses indicated that ZAP1 binds to ZREs in a sequence-specific fashion. These studies demonstrate that ZAP1 plays a direct role in controlling zinc-responsive gene expression in yeast by binding to zinc-responsive elements in the promoters of genes that it regulates.[1]

References

  1. Regulation of zinc homeostasis in yeast by binding of the ZAP1 transcriptional activator to zinc-responsive promoter elements. Zhao, H., Butler, E., Rodgers, J., Spizzo, T., Duesterhoeft, S., Eide, D. J. Biol. Chem. (1998) [Pubmed]
 
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