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Wiley InterScience | ||
![]() Genes to CellsVolume 9 Issue 11, Pages 1043 - 1053 Published Online: 27 Oct 2004 Journal compilation © 2010 by the Molecular Biology Society of Japan/Blackwell Publishing Ltd Published on behalf of the Molecular Biology Society of Japan
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 280K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Locus control region elements HS2 and HS3 in combination with chromatin boundaries confer high-level expression of a human β-globin transgene in a centromeric region Communicated by: Masayuki M. Yamamoto †S. H. L. Kang and P. P. Levings contributed equally to this work. Copyright © 2004 Blackwell Publishing Ltd ABSTRACTExpression constructs are subject to position-effects in transgenic assays unless they harbour elements that protect them from negative or positive influences exerted by chromatin at the site of integration. Locus control regions (LCRs) and boundary elements are able to protect from position effects by preventing heterochromatization of linked genes. The LCR in the human β-globin gene locus is located far upstream of the genes and composed of several erythroid specific DNase I hypersensitive (HS) sites. Previous studies demonstrated that the LCR HS sites act synergistically to confer position-independent and high-level globin gene expression at different integration sites in transgenic mice. Here we show that LCR HS sites 2 and 3, in combination with boundary elements derived from the chicken β-globin gene locus, confer high-level human β-globin gene expression in different chromosomal integration sites in transgenic mice. Moreover, we found that the construct is accessible to nucleases and highly expressed when integrated in a centromeric region. These results demonstrate that the combination of enhancer, chromatin opening and boundary activities can establish independent expression units when integrated into chromatin. Received: 28 June 2004 Accepted: 10 August 2004 |