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Publication : Retrovirus insertion inactivates mouse alpha 1(I) collagen gene by blocking initiation of transcription.

First Author  Hartung S Year  1986
Journal  Nature Volume  320
Issue  6060 Pages  365-7
PubMed ID  3960120 Mgi Jnum  J:8244
Mgi Id  MGI:56713 Doi  10.1038/320365a0
Citation  Hartung S, et al. (1986) Retrovirus insertion inactivates mouse alpha 1(I) collagen gene by blocking initiation of transcription. Nature 320(6060):365-7
abstractText  Mov13 mice carry a single Moloney murine leukaemia virus (M-MuLV) proviral copy in the first intron of the alpha 1(I) collagen gene. Virus insertion interferes with the synthesis of stable alpha 1(I) collagen messenger RNA and causes a recessive lethal mutation. The virus insertion has induced changes of the methylation pattern as well as the chromatin conformation in the mutated gene. Specifically, a DNase-hypersensitive site which is associated with active transcription of the wild-type collagen gene is not present in the mutant allele. The block of collagen expression could be caused by virus-induced instability of collagen mRNA or by impaired initiation of transcription. To distinguish between these possibilities, we have compared the activity of the alpha 1(I) collagen gene promoter in cell lines derived from wild-type and Mov13 embryos by nuclear run-on transcription experiments and S1 mapping of nuclear RNA. We show here that initiation of transcription of the mutant gene is reduced 20-100-fold. This indicates that the virus-induced change of chromatin structure in the promoter region of the mutant gene prevents RNA polymerase from binding to its DNA template. Our results are consistent with the notion that the promoter-associated DNase-hypersensitive site is a prerequisite for rather than a consequence of gene activity.
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