REGULATION OF THE T-CELL RECEPTOR-DELTA ENHANCER BY FUNCTIONAL COOPERATION BETWEEN C-MYB AND CORE-BINDING FACTORS

Citation
C. Hernandezmunain et Ms. Krangel, REGULATION OF THE T-CELL RECEPTOR-DELTA ENHANCER BY FUNCTIONAL COOPERATION BETWEEN C-MYB AND CORE-BINDING FACTORS, Molecular and cellular biology, 14(1), 1994, pp. 473-483
Citations number
84
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
ISSN journal
02707306
Volume
14
Issue
1
Year of publication
1994
Pages
473 - 483
Database
ISI
SICI code
0270-7306(1994)14:1<473:ROTTRE>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
A T-cell-specific transcriptional enhancer lies within the J(delta)3-C (delta) intron of the human T-cell receptor (TCR) delta gene. The 30-b p minimal enhancer element denoted deltaE3 carries a core sequence (TG TGGTTT) that binds a T-cell-specific factor, and that is necessary but not sufficient for transcriptional activation. Here we demonstrate th at the transcription factor c-Myb regulates TCR delta enhancer activit y through a binding site in deltaE3 that is adjacent to the core site. Both v-Myb and c-Myb bind specifically to deltaE3. The Myb site is ne cessary for enhancer activity, because a mutation that eliminates Myb binding abolishes transcriptional activation by the deltaE3 element an d by the 370-bp TCR delta enhancer. Transfection of cells with a c-Myb expression construct upregulates deltaE3 enhancer activity, whereas t reatment of cells with an antisense c-myb oligonucleotide inhibits del taE3 enhancer activity. Since intact Myb and core sites are both requi red for deltaE3 function, our data argue that c-Myb and core binding f actors must cooperate to mediate transcriptional activation through de ltaE3. Efficient cooperation depends on the relative positioning of th e Myb and core sites, since only one of two overlapping Myb sites with in deltaE3 is functional and alterations of the distance between this site and the core site disrupt enhancer activity. Cooperative regulati on by c-Myb and core-binding factors is likely to play an important ro le in the control of gene expression during T-cell development.