| Literature DB >> 9933356 |
M Roberti1, P L Polosa, C Musicco, F Milella, S A Qureshi, M N Gadaleta, H T Jacobs, P Cantatore.
Abstract
Footprinting studies with the purine-modifying agent dimethyl sulphate were performed in Paracentrotus lividus eggs and embryos to analyze in vivo the interactions between protein and mitochondrial DNA. Footprinting in the small non-coding region and at the boundary between the ND5 and ND6 genes revealed two strong contact sites corresponding with the in vitro binding sequences of mitochondrial D-loop-Binding Protein (mtDBP). The analysis of the pause region of mtDNA replication showed a strong footprint corresponding with the binding site of the mitochondrial Pause region-Binding Protein-2 (mtPBP-2), but only a very weak signal at the binding site of the mitochondrial Pause region-Binding Protein-1 (mtPBP-1), which in vitro binds DNA with high efficiency. In vitro and in vivo analysis of the 3' end-region of the two rRNA genes showed no significant protein-DNA interactions, suggesting that, in contrast to mammals, the 3' ends of sea urchin mitochondrial rRNAs are not generated by a protein-dependent transcription termination event. These and other data support a model in which expression of mitochondrial genes in sea urchins is regulated post-transcriptionally. Footprinting at the five AT-rich consensus regions allowed the detection of a binding site in the non-coding region for an as-yet unidentified protein, mtAT-1BP. The occupancy of this site appears to be developmentally regulated, being detectable in the pluteus larval stage, but not in unfertilized eggs.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 9933356 DOI: 10.1007/s002940050419
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Genet ISSN: 0172-8083 Impact factor: 3.886