| Literature DB >> 26833485 |
Mona Lehmeyer1, Erik K R Hanko1, Lena Roling1, Lilian Gonzalez1, Maren Wehrs1, Reinhard Hehl2.
Abstract
The high gene density in Arabidopsis thaliana leaves only relatively short intergenic regions for potential cis-regulatory sequences. To learn more about the regulation of genes harbouring only very short upstream intergenic regions, this study investigates a recently identified novel microbe-associated molecular pattern (MAMP)-responsive cis-sequence located within the 101 bp long intergenic region upstream of the At1g13990 gene. It is shown that the cis-regulatory sequence is sufficient for MAMP-responsive reporter gene activity in the context of its native promoter. The 3' UTR of the upstream gene has a quantitative effect on gene expression. In context of a synthetic promoter, the cis-sequence is shown to achieve a strong increase in reporter gene activity as a monomer, dimer and tetramer. Mutation analysis of the cis-sequence determined the specific nucleotides required for gene expression activation. In transgenic A. thaliana the synthetic promoter harbouring a tetramer of the cis-sequence not only drives strong pathogen-responsive reporter gene expression but also shows a high background activity. The results of this study contribute to our understanding how genes with very short upstream intergenic regions are regulated and how these regions can serve as a source for MAMP-responsive cis-sequences for synthetic promoter design.Entities:
Keywords: Bioinformatics; Databases; Plant-pathogen interaction; Synthetic biology; Transgenic plants; Transient expression
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26833485 DOI: 10.1007/s00438-016-1173-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Genet Genomics ISSN: 1617-4623 Impact factor: 3.291