Zhou S, Zhang J, Hirai M, Chinzei Y, Kayser H, Wyatt G R, Walker V K
Department of Biology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ont., Canada K7L 3N6.
Mol Cell Endocrinol. 2002 Apr 25;190(1-2):177-85. doi: 10.1016/s0303-7207(01)00602-5.
Although juvenile hormone (JH) has essential roles in insect development and reproduction, the molecular mechanisms of gene regulation by JH remain an enigma. In Locusta migratoria, the partially palindromic 15-nt sequence, GAGGTTCGAG(A)/(T)CCT(T)/(C), found upstream of a JH-induced gene, jhp21, was designated as a putative juvenile hormone response element (JHRE). When JH-deprived adult female locusts were treated with the active JH analog, methoprene, a fat body nuclear factor that bound specifically to JHRE appeared after 24 h. Binding exhibited a preference for an inverted repeat with GAGGTTC in the left half-site, a single nucleotide spacer, and a right half-site in which some variation is acceptable. Binding to JHRE was abolished by phosphorylation catalyzed by a C-type protein kinase present in the nuclear extracts. The DNA-binding protein is thus believed to be a transcription factor, which is brought to an active state through the action of JH and then participates in the regulation of certain JH-dependent genes.