| Literature DB >> 26645089 |
Damir Alzhanov1, Peter Rotwein2.
Abstract
Insulin-like growth factor-2 (IGF2) is highly expressed in skeletal muscle and was identified as a quantitative trait locus for muscle mass. Yet little is known about mechanisms of its regulation in muscle. Recently, a DNA segment found ∼100 kb from the Igf2 gene was identified as a possible muscle transcriptional control element. Here we have developed an in vivo reporter system to assess this putative enhancer by substituting nuclear (n) EGFP for Igf2 coding exons in a bacterial artificial chromosome containing the mouse Igf2 - H19 chromosomal locus. After stable transfection into a mesenchymal stem cell line, individual clones were converted to myoblasts and underwent progressive muscle-specific gene expression and myotube formation in differentiation medium. Transgenic mRNA and nuclear-targeted enhanced green fluorescent protein were produced coincident with endogenous Igf2 mRNA, but only in lines containing an intact distal conserved DNA element. Our results show that a 294 bp DNA fragment containing two E-boxes is a necessary and sufficient long-range enhancer for induction of Igf2 gene transcription during skeletal muscle differentiation and provides a robust experimental platform for its further functional dissection.Entities:
Keywords: IGF2; distal enhancer; gene transcription; muscle differentiation; recombineering
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26645089 PMCID: PMC4729695 DOI: 10.1152/physiolgenomics.00095.2015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Physiol Genomics ISSN: 1094-8341 Impact factor: 3.107