12 research outputs found
Different DNA contact schemes are used by two winged helix proteins to recognize a DNA binding sequence
The Dissociation Rate of a Winged Helix Protein–DNA Complex Is Influenced by Non-DNA Contact Residues
Structural changes in the region directly adjacent to the DNA-binding helix highlight a possible mechanism to explain the observed changes in the sequence-specific binding of winged helix proteins 1 1Edited by P. E. Wright
Taste Properties of Potassium Chloride Alone and in Mixtures with Sodium Chloride Using a Check-All-That-Apply Method
A COMPARISON OF BASIC TASTE MODALITIES, USING A DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS TECHNIQUE, FOR VARYING LEVELS OF SODIUM AND KCl IN TWO MODEL SOUP SYSTEMS
Solution structure and dynamics of the DNA-binding domain of the adipocyte-transcription factor FREAC-11 1 1Edited by P. E. Wright
Effect of spray-drying process on physical properties of sodium chloride/maltodextrin complexes
Identification of a Boundary Domain Adjacent to the Potent Human Cytomegalovirus Enhancer That Represses Transcription of the Divergent UL127 Promoter
Transcriptional repression within a complex modular promoter may play a key role in determining the action of enhancer elements. In human cytomegalovirus, the major immediate-early promoter (MIEP) locus contains a highly potent and complex modular enhancer. Evidence is presented suggesting that sequences of the MIEP between nucleotide positions −556 and −673 function to prevent transcription activation by enhancer elements from the UL127 open reading frame divergent promoter. Transient transfection assays of reporter plasmids revealed repressor sequences located between nucleotides −556 and −638. The ability of these sequences to confer repression in the context of an infection was shown using recombinant viruses generated from a bacterial artificial chromosome containing an infectious human cytomegalovirus genome. In addition to repressor sequences between −556 and −638, infection experiments using recombinant virus mutants indicated that sequences between −638 and −673 also contribute to repression of the UL127 promoter. On the basis of in vitro transcription and transient transfection assays, we further show that interposed viral repressor sequences completely inhibit enhancer-mediated activation of not only the homologous but also heterologous promoters. These and other experiments suggest that repression involves an interaction of host-encoded regulatory factors with defined promoter sequences that have the property of proximally interfering with upstream enhancer elements in a chromatin-independent manner. Altogether, our findings establish the presence of a boundary domain that efficiently blocks enhancer-promoter interactions, thus explaining how the enhancer can work to selectively activate the MIEP
