| Literature DB >> 16428433 |
Ekaterina Savitskaya1, Larisa Melnikova, Margarita Kostuchenko, Elena Kravchenko, Ekaterina Pomerantseva, Tatiana Boikova, Darya Chetverina, Aleksander Parshikov, Polyna Zobacheva, Elena Gracheva, Alexander Galkin, Pavel Georgiev.
Abstract
The Su(Hw) insulator found in the gypsy retrotransposon is the most potent enhancer blocker in Drosophila melanogaster. However, two such insulators in tandem do not prevent enhancer-promoter communication, apparently because of their pairing interaction that results in mutual neutralization. Furthering our studies of the role of insulators in the control of gene expression, here we present a functional analysis of a large set of transgenic constructs with various arrangements of regulatory elements, including two or three insulators. We demonstrate that their interplay can have quite different outcomes depending on the order of and distance between elements. Thus, insulators can interact with each other over considerable distances, across interposed enhancers or promoters and coding sequences, whereby enhancer blocking may be attenuated, cancelled, or restored. Some inferences concerning the possible modes of insulator action are made from collating the new data and the relevant literature, with tentative schemes illustrating the regulatory situations in particular model constructs.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16428433 PMCID: PMC1347022 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.26.3.754-761.2006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Biol ISSN: 0270-7306 Impact factor: 4.272