A transcriptional silencer controls the developmental expression of the CD4 gene

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Abstract

The appropriate expression of the CD4 glycoprotein is required for T-cell function and development. Here we define the transcriptional control elements in the CD4 locus that convey CD4+-specific expression of a marker gene in transgenic mice. Using nuclear run-on experiments, we have determined that the major mechanism for CD4 expression control during development is transcriptional. We have identified a developmental stage- and tissue-specific negative regulatory element in the first intron of the murine CD4 gene that has the characteristics of a trauscriptional silencer. The CD4 silencer functions to inhibit marker gene expression at two different stages of T-cell development, as well as in non-T hematopoietic cells, and thus is the critical controlling element responsible for T-cell-specific, as well as developmental- and subclass-specific, expression.

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Siu, G., Wurster, A. L., Duncan, D. D., Soliman, T. M., & Hedrick, S. M. (1994). A transcriptional silencer controls the developmental expression of the CD4 gene. EMBO Journal, 13(15), 3570–3579. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1460-2075.1994.tb06664.x

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