OVARY-SPECIFIC EXPRESSION OF A GENE ENCODING A DIVERGENT ALPHA-TUBULIN ISOTYPE IN XENOPUS

Authors
Citation
Wl. Wu et Gt. Morgan, OVARY-SPECIFIC EXPRESSION OF A GENE ENCODING A DIVERGENT ALPHA-TUBULIN ISOTYPE IN XENOPUS, Differentiation, 58(1), 1994, pp. 9-18
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Developmental Biology","Cytology & Histology
Journal title
ISSN journal
03014681
Volume
58
Issue
1
Year of publication
1994
Pages
9 - 18
Database
ISI
SICI code
0301-4681(1994)58:1<9:OEOAGE>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
We are investigating the structure and regulation of alpha-tubulin gen es expressed in amphibian oocytes. We have characterised here a gene, X alpha T207, that produces a major alpha-tubulin mRNA of Xenopus laev is ovary. X alpha T207 mRNA was not detected in other frog tissues and its production may therefore be a key identifying feature of ovarian differentiation. In comparison to the tubulin isotypes so far describe d in mammals and Xenopus, the alpha-tubulin encoded by X alpha T207 is divergent in overall amino acid sequence, particularly in the N-termi nal region between residues 39-50. This pattern of divergence is also displayed by the ovary-specific alpha-tubulin gene of Drosophila, D al pha 4, although the two genes do not appear to be orthologous. The dev elopment of specialised microtubular structures and activities in oocy tes, eggs and early embryos may then be correlated with the expression of a divergent alpha-tubulin isotype in a wide range of organisms. To understand the basis of the ovary-specific expression of X alpha T207 we examined the transcriptional activity of wild type and mutant prom oters after their microinjection in Xenopus oocytes. Only 65 bp upstre am of the initiation site were required for full activity of the X alp ha T207 promoter, and an element fitting the Y-box consensus was invol ved in controlling the efficiency of initiation. Previous oocyte injec tion experiments have implicated the Y-box in the oocyte-specific tran scription of genes that are also expressed in other cell types, so its involvement in the oocyte-restricted expression of X alpha T207 furth er suggests that transcription factors recognising the Y-box normally regulate gene expression during oocyte development. Since a Y-box also occurs in the D alpha 4 promoter, our results suggest that in both or ganisms oocyte-specific expression of a divergent alpha-tubulin could be achieved by a common mechanism.