A Novel YY1-Independent Silencer Represses the Activity of the Human Papillomavirus Type 16 Enhancer

  • O’Connor M
  • Stünkel W
  • Zimmermann H
  • et al.
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Abstract

Regulation of the human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV-16) E6 promoter is a complex process in which transcriptional repression as well as activation plays an important role. Here, we identify a negative regulatory element that in the context of a continuous long control region fragment overcomes the activation of the HPV-16 enhancer. This silencing element, which we have termed a PSM (papillomavirus silencing motif), consists of two copies of the sequence 5′-TAYAATAAT-3′ that overlap the origin of replication. Each copy of this 9-bp sequence binds the same unknown cellular factor, which we refer to as PSM-BP (PSM binding protein). Both copies of the binding sequence are required for transcriptional repression, and we provide evidence that suggests that this particular organization results in the stabilization of a PSM-BP dimer. The silencing motif, while functioning in either orientation, showed a positional requirement between the enhancer and the promoter. Experiments with both a heterologous enhancer and a promoter also demonstrated a general ability of this element to function as a transcriptional silencer in non-HPV systems. Our findings provide an important addition to our understanding of HPV-16 gene regulation and an interesting model for the study of transcriptional repression.

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APA

O’Connor, M. J., Stünkel, W., Zimmermann, H., Koh, C.-H., & Bernard, H.-U. (1998). A Novel YY1-Independent Silencer Represses the Activity of the Human Papillomavirus Type 16 Enhancer. Journal of Virology, 72(12), 10083–10092. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.72.12.10083-10092.1998

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