Four of the Seven Zinc Fingers of the Evi-1 Myeloid-Transforming Gene Are Required for Sequence-Specific Binding to GA(C/T)AAGA(T/C)AAGATAA

R Delwel, T Funabiki, BL Kreider… - Molecular and cellular …, 1993 - Taylor & Francis
R Delwel, T Funabiki, BL Kreider, K Morishita, JN Ihle
Molecular and cellular biology, 1993Taylor & Francis
Expression of the Evi-1 gene is activated in murine myeloid leukemias by retroviral
insertions and in human acute myelogenous leukemia by translocations and inversions
involving chromosome band 3q26 where the gene resides. Aberrant expression of the Evi-1
gene has been shown to interfere with myeloid differentiation, which is proposed to be the
basis for its role in leukemias. The Evi-1 gene encodes a 145-kDa DNA-binding protein
containing two domains of seven and three Cys2-His2 zinc fingers. Previous studies …
Expression of the Evi-1 gene is activated in murine myeloid leukemias by retroviral insertions and in human acute myelogenous leukemia by translocations and inversions involving chromosome band 3q26 where the gene resides. Aberrant expression of the Evi-1 gene has been shown to interfere with myeloid differentiation, which is proposed to be the basis for its role in leukemias. The Evi-1 gene encodes a 145-kDa DNA-binding protein containing two domains of seven and three Cys2-His2 zinc fingers. Previous studies identified a portion of the consensus DNA-binding sequence for the first domain of zinc fingers. The experiments presented here extend these studies and demonstrate that the first domain recognizes a consensus of 15 nucleotides consisting of GA(C/T)AAGA(T/C)AAGATAA. The first three fingers of the first domain do not detectably bind DNA but contribute to the binding by conferring a relative specificity for GACAA verses GATAA in the first position. The first three fingers also contribute to optimal binding of the 15-nucleotide consensus sequence.
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