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-Fibrinogen Subunit Gene from Xenopus laevis
Department of Physiology University of Missouri School of Medicine Columbia, Missouri 65212
Glucocorticoids induce gene expression by binding
to an intracellular receptor that interacts with genomic DNA and
stimulates transcription of specific genes. The consensus DNA-binding
site for the glucocorticoid receptor, called a glucocorticoid response
element (GRE), is GGTACAnnnTGTTCT. In the classical model, binding of
the receptor as a dimer to the two halves of the GRE is required for
activation of transcription. For some glucocorticoid-regulated genes,
additional DNA-binding proteins called accessory factors are necessary
for hormonal responsiveness. We have identified a new factor required
for glucocorticoid-induced expression of the
-fibrinogen subunit
gene from the frog Xenopus laevis. Transfection of cloned
DNA fragments into primary Xenopus hepatocytes showed that
the DNA between 163 and 187 bp upstream of the transcription initiation
site is essential for hormonal activation. A single complex forms when
this small region of DNA is incubated in vitro with
Xenopus liver nuclear proteins. The protein recognition
site has been narrowed to AAGAGTTAA, a sequence not previously
described as a transcription factor-binding site. We have named the
protein(s) bound to this sequence Xenopus glucocorticoid
receptor accessory factor (XGRAF). In addition to the XGRAF-binding
site, glucocorticoid regulation of the
-fibrinogen gene requires at
least three nearby GREs, each of which is a poor match to the consensus
GRE. The position of the binding site for XGRAF overlaps the putative
upstream half of the most important GRE. Models are presented to show
possible ways that the novel accessory factor and the glucocorticoid
receptor could act through closely juxtaposed sites on the DNA.
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