Activation of cell-specific expression of rat growth hormone and prolactin genes by a common transcription factor

C Nelson, VR Albert, HP Elsholtz, LIW Lu… - Science, 1988 - science.org
C Nelson, VR Albert, HP Elsholtz, LIW Lu, MG Rosenfeld
Science, 1988science.org
In the anterior pituitary gland, there are five phenotypically distinct cell types, including cells
that produce either prolactin (lactotrophs) or growth hormone (somatotrophs). Multiple,
related cis-active elements that exhibit synergistic interactions appear to be the critical
determinants of the transcriptional activation of the rat prolactin and growth hormone genes.
A common positive tissue-specific transcription factor, referred to as Pit-1, appears to bind to
all the cell-specific elements in each gene and to be required for the activation of both the …
In the anterior pituitary gland, there are five phenotypically distinct cell types, including cells that produce either prolactin (lactotrophs) or growth hormone (somatotrophs). Multiple, related cis-active elements that exhibit synergistic interactions appear to be the critical determinants of the transcriptional activation of the rat prolactin and growth hormone genes. A common positive tissue-specific transcription factor, referred to as Pit-1, appears to bind to all the cell-specific elements in each gene and to be required for the activation of both the prolactin and growth hormone genes. The data suggest that, in the course of development, a single tissue-specific factor activates sets of genes that ultimately exhibit restricted cell-specific expression and define cellular phenotype.
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