Delineation of a previously unrecognized cis-acting element required for HLA class II gene expression

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Abstract

The cis-acting DNA sequences that control supression of the HLA-DPA and HLA-DQB promoters have been investigated in detail. A set of recombinant plasmids containing 5′ promoter deletions as well as site-directed mutants of the DPA and DQB genes were fused to a reporter gene and transfected into human B and interferon γ (IFN-γ)-inducible cells. A previously unrecognized cis element, which is essential both for transcription induced by IFN-γ in several and types and for constitutive class II expression in B cells, in addition to the well known X and Y boxes, has been defined. This sequence, which spans nucleotides -107 to -98 and -146 to -137 of the DPA and DQB promoters, respectively, has been called the J element. Some evidence for function of a fourth element, the S element, is also presented.

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Sugawara, M., Ponath, P. D., Shin, J., Yang, Z., & Strominger, J. L. (1991). Delineation of a previously unrecognized cis-acting element required for HLA class II gene expression. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 88(22), 10347–10351. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.88.22.10347

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