Identification of two evolutionarily conserved and functional regulatory elements in intron 2 of the human BRCA1 gene


Autoria(s): Wardrop, Stacey L.; Brown, Melissa A.; kConFab Investigators
Data(s)

01/09/2005

Resumo

Cross-species comparative genomics is a powerful strategy for identifying functional regulatory elements within noncoding DNA. In this paper, comparative analysis of human and mouse intronic sequences in the breast cancer susceptibility gene (BRCA1) revealed two evolutionarily conserved noncoding sequences (CNS) in intron 2, 5 kb downstream of the core BRCA1 promoter. The functionality of these elements was examined using homologous-recombination-based mutagenesis of reporter gene-tagged cosmids incorporating these regions and flanking sequences from the BRCA1 locus. This showed that CNS-1 and CNS-2 have differential transcriptional regulatory activity in epithelial cell lines. Mutation of CNS-1 significantly reduced reporter gene expression to 30% of control levels. Conversely mutation of CNS-2 increased expression to 200% of control levels. Regulation is at the level of transcription and shows promoter specificity. Both elements also specifically bind nuclear proteins in vitro. These studies demonstrate that the combination of comparative genomics and functional analysis is a successful strategy to identify novel regulatory elements and provide the first direct evidence that conserved noncoding sequences in BRCA1 regulate gene expression. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:75564

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier Inc.

Palavras-Chave #Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology #Genetics & Heredity #Brca1 Gene #Intron #Transcriptional Regulatory Element #Comparative Genomics #Genetic Recombination #Sporadic Breast-cancer #Factor-binding Sites #Early-onset Breast #Ovarian-cancer #Transcriptional Regulation #Repressor Element #Promoter Region #Familial Breast #Messenger-rna #Human Genome #C1 #270201 Gene Expression #730108 Cancer and related disorders
Tipo

Journal Article