Itier J M, Douhet P, Desbois P, Joshi R L, Dandoy-Dron F, Jami J, Bucchini D
Institut Cochin de Génétique Moléculaire, Paris, France.
Differentiation. 1996 Sep;60(5):309-16. doi: 10.1046/j.1432-0436.1996.6050309.x.
A mini-human insulin gene and four derivatives mutated at several regions potentially involved in the regulation of gene expression were used to generate transgenic mouse lines. The effect of these mutations on the efficiency of gene expression and cell specificity was studied using three approaches: (1) Northern blot analysis using total RNA from pancreas and other organs, (2) radioimmunoassay to detect the human C-peptide in urine samples, and (3) immunocytochemistry of pancreas sections to examine whether expression of the transgene was still specifically expressed in beta-cells. Mutation of the cis-acting elements located between -238 and -206 (GCII and CTII motifs) resulted in a strong decrease of gene expression in the pancreas of transgenic mice, but it did not lead to complete extinction of the transgene expression. This region alone (-255/-202), when linked to the minimal Herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene (tk) promoter, failed to activate chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene expression in transfected insulinoma cells, while it was activated by the equivalent region of the rat insulin I gene. On the contrary, mutation of the DNA motifs located between -109 and -75 (GCI and CTI) or between -323 and -297 (CTIII) did not significantly affect the level of the human insulin gene expression in transgenic mice. Replacement of the insulin promoter (-58/+l) by the tk promoter did not alter its level of expression in transgenic mice. In all instances, expression of the different transgenes remained localized in the islet beta-cells. Altogether, these results indicate that the GCII-CTII motif is an important regulatory element for efficient expression of the human insulin gene in vivo, although it alone does not allow gene expression as it would require the association of other elements.
一个微型人类胰岛素基因以及在几个可能参与基因表达调控的区域发生突变的四个衍生物被用于构建转基因小鼠品系。使用三种方法研究了这些突变对基因表达效率和细胞特异性的影响:(1)使用来自胰腺和其他器官的总RNA进行Northern印迹分析;(2)放射免疫分析法检测尿液样本中的人C肽;(3)对胰腺切片进行免疫细胞化学分析,以检查转基因的表达是否仍在β细胞中特异性表达。位于-238至-206之间的顺式作用元件(GCII和CTII基序)发生突变,导致转基因小鼠胰腺中基因表达大幅下降,但并未导致转基因表达完全消失。单独的这个区域(-255/-202)与最小单纯疱疹病毒胸苷激酶基因(tk)启动子相连时,在转染的胰岛素瘤细胞中未能激活氯霉素乙酰转移酶(CAT)基因表达,而大鼠胰岛素I基因的等效区域可激活该表达。相反,位于-109至-75之间(GCI和CTI)或-323至-297之间(CTIII)的DNA基序发生突变,对转基因小鼠中人胰岛素基因的表达水平没有显著影响。用tk启动子替换胰岛素启动子(-58/+1)不会改变其在转基因小鼠中的表达水平。在所有情况下,不同转基因的表达仍局限于胰岛β细胞中。总之,这些结果表明,GCII-CTII基序是人类胰岛素基因在体内高效表达的重要调控元件,尽管它单独不能实现基因表达,因为还需要其他元件的协同作用。