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. 1994 May;6(5):659–668. doi: 10.1105/tpc.6.5.659

A protein binding AT-rich sequence in the soybean leghemoglobin c3 promoter is a general cis element that requires proximal DNA elements to stimulate transcription.

N B Laursen 1, K Larsen 1, J Y Knudsen 1, H J Hoffmann 1, C Poulsen 1, K A Marcker 1, E O Jensen 1
PMCID: PMC160466  PMID: 8038605

Abstract

A nodule nuclear factor, NAT2, interacts with two AT-rich binding sites (NAT2 BS1 and NAT2 BS2) in the soybean leghemoglobin (lb) c3 promoter. In transgenic Lotus corniculatus nodules, an oligonucleotide containing NAT2 BS1 activated an inactive -159 lbc3 promoter when placed immediately upstream of the promoter. The activation was independent of the orientation of NAT2 BS1 but was dependent on its position in the promoter. The abilities of different mutated binding sites to activate expression in vivo were correlated to their respective in vitro affinities for binding NAT2. This suggested that the interaction between NAT2 and NAT2 BS1 is responsible for the observed reactivation. Further activation experiments with the lbc3 and the leaf-specific Nicotiana plumbaginifolia ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase small subunit (rbcS-8B) promoter suggested that another specific cis element(s) is required for the function of NAT2 BS1. Thus, the -102 lbc3 promoter lacking the organ-specific element (-139 to -102) was not reactivated by the presence of the binding site, and the rbcS-8B promoter required sequences between -312 and -257 to be activated by NAT2 BS1. This implies that NAT2 has to work in combination with other trans-acting factor(s) to increase expression. The finding of NAT2-like binding activities in different plant organs and the specific expression of the hybrid NAT2 BS1/-312 rbcS-8B promoter in leaves suggest that NAT2 is a general activator of transcription.

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Selected References

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