Silent genes in the mouse major urinary protein gene family

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Abstract

To date, two classes of mouse major urinary protein (MUP)-encoding genes have been described, the expressed genes and the intervening-sequence-containing pseudogenes. The data presented in this paper define a third class, the silent Mup genes, which are potentially functional but appear not to be expressed under normal circumstances. We describe a MUP subfamily (Mup-1.5) containing two genes, Mup-1.5a and Mup-1.5b, that are nearly identical, differing at only three positions (>99.9% identity) over the entire 4-kilobase (kb) transcription unit and ~1 kb of flanking DNA. The similarity between these two genes extends over >35 kb. Using specific oligonucleotides, we have shown that the 5a gene is expressed in BALB/cByJ mice, primarily in the submaxillary gland, whereas the 5b gene is not expressed. However, we found that when a 9.4-kb DNA fragment containing the Mup-1.5b gene was introduced into the mouse germ line, mice in two of the four transgenic lines expressed this gene at a high level and with the tissue-specificity characteristic of the Mup-1.5a gene. These results suggest that the inactivity of the endogenous Mup-1.5b gene is due not to a lack of functional positive regulatory elements, but to long-range, inhibitory position effects.

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Shi, Y., Son, H. J., Shahan, K., Rodriguez, M., Costantini, F., & Derman, E. (1989). Silent genes in the mouse major urinary protein gene family. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 86(12), 4584–4588. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.86.12.4584

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