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Gene Expression

Transcriptional and Posttranscriptional Silencing of Rodent α1(I) Collagen by a Homologous Transcriptionally Self-Silenced Transgene

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Pages 274-283 | Received 08 Sep 1998, Accepted 12 Oct 1998, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Transient transfection of rodent fibroblasts with plasmids carrying a full-size pro-α1(I) collagen gene (pWTC1) results in rapid reduction of the endogenous transcripts by >90%, while the transgene mRNA is undetectable. Using deletion constructs, two adjacent 5′ noncoding regions of the gene are identified as causing transcriptional silencing of the endogene in normal and v-fos-transformed cells but not in nontumorigenic revertants, which show partial relief from v-fos transformation-induced α1(I) gene suppression. The 3′ end of the transgene carries an additional element(s), causing posttranscriptional silencing of the endogene in all cells including the revertant. Data indicate that the transgenes are transcriptionally self-silenced. Genome-integrated transgenes that are transcriptionally active also allow expression of the endogene, suggesting gene activation by chromosomal factors missing in pWTC1. Silencing is not regulated by antisense RNA. Silencing of the endogenous pro-α1(I) collagen gene is not linked to the level of transgene expression.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was supported by Public Health Service grant 1RO1-CA50378 from the National Cancer Institute. M.B.B. was supported by NIEHS toxicology training grant NIH-2T32-ES07020.

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