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Research Article

The Chicken Skeletal α-Actin Gene Promoter Region Exhibits Partial Dyad Symmetry and a Capacity To Drive Bidirectional Transcription

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Pages 4587-4597 | Received 13 Apr 1988, Accepted 28 Jul 1988, Published online: 31 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

The chicken skeletal α-actin gene promoter region (-202 to -12) provides myogenic transcriptional specificity. This promoter contains partial dyad symmetry about an axis at nucleotide -108 and in transfection experiments is capable of directing transcription in a bidirectional manner. At least three different transcription initiation start sites, oriented toward upstream sequences, were mapped 25 to 30 base pairs from TATA-like regions. The opposing transcriptional activity was potentiated upon the deletion of sequences proximal to the α-actin transcription start site. Thus, sequences which serve to position RNA polymerase for α-actin transcription may allow, in their absence, the selection of alternative and reverse-oriented start sites. Nuclear runoff transcription assays of embryonic muscle indicated that divergent transcription may occur in vivo but with rapid turnover of nuclear transcripts. Divergent transcriptional activity enabled us to define the 3′ regulatory boundary of the skeletal α-actin promoter which retains a high level of myogenic transcriptional activity. The 3′ regulatory border was detected when serial 3′ deletions bisected the element (-91 CCAAA TATGG -82) which reduced transcriptional activity by 80%. Previously we showed that disruption of its upstream counterpart (-127 CCAAAGAAGG -136) resulted in about a 90% decrease in activity. These element pairs, which we describe as CCAAT box-associated repeats, are conserved in all sequenced vertebrate sarcomeric actin genes and may act in a cooperative manner to facilitate transcription in myogenic cells.

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