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doi: 10.1016/0092-8674(83)90544-5.

Identification of two distinct regulatory regions adjacent to the human beta-interferon gene

Identification of two distinct regulatory regions adjacent to the human beta-interferon gene

K Zinn et al. Cell.1983 Oct.

Abstract

To study the regulation of the human beta-interferon (beta-IFN) gene by poly(I)-poly(C), we analyzed the expression of deletion mutants of the cloned gene introduced into mouse cells on a new bovine papilloma virus (BPV) vector. In stable cell lines transformed by a BPV-IFN plasmid containing the beta-IFN structural gene with 210 bp of DNA to the 5' side of its mRNA cap site (denoted -210), human beta-IFN mRNA is induced approximately 400-fold by poly(I)-poly(C), and reproducible levels of expression are observed for independent cell lines. Our studies indicate that there are two distinct regulatory regions adjacent to the gene, located between -77 and -19, and between -210 and -107. The -77 to -19 region is required for constitutive and induced IFN gene expression, and both are drastically reduced by deletion to -73. When sequences between -210 and -107 are deleted, the constitutive level of IFN gene expression is increased 5- to 10-fold, while induced expression is essentially unaffected. Deletion of the -210 to -107 region also alters the kinetics of induction of the gene.

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