| Literature DB >> 21599953 |
Ursula M Paredes1, Vivien J Bubb, Kate Haddley, Gabriele A Macho, John P Quinn.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Detecting functional variants contributing to diversity of behaviour is crucial for dissecting genetics of complex behaviours. At a molecular level, characterisation of variation in exons has been studied as they are easily identified in the current genome annotation although the functional consequences are less well understood; however, it has been difficult to prioritise regions of non-coding DNA in which genetic variation could also have significant functional consequences. Comparison of multiple vertebrate genomes has allowed the identification of non-coding evolutionary conserved regions (ECRs), in which the degree of conservation can be comparable with exonic regions suggesting functional significance.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21599953 PMCID: PMC3121617 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2202-12-46
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurosci ISSN: 1471-2202 Impact factor: 3.288
Figure 11A. Evolutionary conserved regions (ECRs) in the DRD4 gene locus of mammals. The conservation of non-coding regions in the DRD4 locus and flanking regions was obtained using the conservation tool of the UCSC browser, set to identify most conserved areas amongst 28 species. Neighbouring genes SCT and DEAF1 delimited the region analysed. One conserved peak (D4ECR1) in the first intron of DRD4 gene was selected for study. The alignment shows conservation of the sequence amongst 8 mammals. Dashed lines indicate no alignment. Figure 1B. Sp1 binding sites (TFBS) found in the human D4ECR1 sequence. The Alibaba 2.1 program identified 5 Sp1 sites within the sequence of the human D4ECR1 sequence (highlighted in bold font and underlined).
TFBS in different mammalian D4ECR1 as identified by AliBaba 2.1.
| Human | Sp1, GATA1, C/EBPα, AP2α, D1, MIG1, E1, SRF, Oct1, CoS, NF1, GR, T3Rα, myogenin. |
| Chimpanzee | Sp1, C/EBPα, D1, E1, SRF, Oct1, CoS, NF1, GR, T3Rα, myogenin. |
| Rhesus macaque | Sp1, C/EBPα, D1, PU.1, FTz, E1, SRF, Oct1, CoS, NF1, GR, T3Rα. |
| Rat | Sp1, Oct1, YY1, RAP1, NF1, Oct1, COUP, GR. |
| Mouse | Sp1, GCN4, Oct1, C/EBPα, GAL4, Zen1, NF1, AP2α, GATA1, AP1, COUP, GR, T3Rα. |
| Guinea pig | Sp1, GATA1, NFκ, AP2α, Adf1, NF1, HNF1, GR, myogenin. |
| Dog | Sp1, NF1, CTF, NFκ, C/EBPα. |
| Tenrec | Sp1, NF1, PU.1, Fra2, C/EBPα, CRE-BP1, USF, NF1, c-Jun, MyoD, AP2α, REV-ErBAα, ER. |
Figure 2The human D4ECR1 exhibits transcriptional activity in dissociated cultures of neonate rat frontal cortex. D4ECR1 (1 μg) construct was transfected into dissociated cultures of frontal cortex obtained from 2 and 5 days old Wistar rats under basal conditions. The transcriptional activity of the D4ECR1 is different from pGL3p alone. This effect was found to be significant (Student's T-test, p < 0.001, ***). Values obtained in three independent experiments per triplicate (n = 9).
Figure 3Sp1 represses the D4ECR1 expression in dissociated cultures of neonate rat frontal cortex. Transcriptional activities of D4ECR1 and control plasmid (pGL3p) were equalled to 100%. Both D4ECR1 and pGL3p plasmids were co-transfected with 2 concentrations of Sp1 expression vector (0.5 and 1 μg). Sp1 significantly down regulated transcriptional activity supported by D4ECR1 (Student's T-test p ≤ 0.01 = **; n = 9, 2 day old neonates). The effect of Sp1 over-expression was expressed as the percentage repression on basal transcriptional activity of D4ECR1 and pGL3p.