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Research Article

The Erythroid Krüppel-Like Factor Transactivation Domain is a Critical Component for Cell-Specific Inducibility of a β-Globin Promoter

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Pages 852-860 | Received 08 Sep 1994, Accepted 17 Nov 1994, Published online: 30 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Erythroid Krüppel-like factor (EKLF) is an erythroid cell-specific DNA-binding protein that activates transcription from the β-globin CACCC element, a functionally important and evolutionarily conserved component of globin as well as other erythroid cell-specific promoters and enhancers. We have attempted to elucidate the molecular role of EKLF in erythrocyte-specific transcriptional activation. First, in vivo and in vitro analyses have been used to demonstrate that the level of activation by EKLF is dependent on the orientation and number of CACCC elements, that EKLF contains separable activation and DNA-binding domains, and that the EKLF proline-rich region is a potent activator in CV-1 cells when fused to a nonrelated DNA-binding module. Second, we have established a transient assay in murine erythroleukemia cells in which reproducible levels of a reporter can be induced when linked to a locus control region enhancer-β-globin promoter and in which induction is abolished when the promoter CAC site is mutated to a GAL site. Third, we demonstrate that the EKLF transactivation region, when fused to the GAL DNA-binding domain, can restore inducibility to this mutated construct and that this inducibility exhibits activator-, promoter-, and cell-type specificity. These results demonstrate that EKLF provides a crucial transactivation function for globin expression and further reinforce the idea that EKLF is an important regulator of CACCC element-directed transcription in erythroid cells.

Notes

† Publication 174 from the Brookdale Center for Molecular Biology at The Mount Sinai Medical Center.

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