A G-quadruplex structure at the 5′ end of the H19 coding region regulates H19 transcription

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作者
Mitsuko Fukuhara
Yue Ma
Kazuo Nagasawa
Fumiko Toyoshima
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[1] Institute for Frontier Life and Medical Science,Department of Biosystems Science
[2] Kyoto University,Department of Mammalian Regulatory Network
[3] Graduate School of Biostudies,Department of Biotechnology and Life Science
[4] Kyoto University,undefined
[5] Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology,undefined
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The H19 gene, one of the best known imprinted genes, encodes a long non-coding RNA that regulates cell proliferation and differentiation. H19 RNA is widely expressed in embryonic tissues, but its expression is restricted in only a few tissues after birth. However, regulation of H19 gene expression remains poorly understood outside the context of genomic imprinting. Here we identified evolutionarily conserved guanine (G)-rich repeated motifs at the 5′ end of the H19 coding region that are consistent with theoretically deduced G-quadruplex sequences. Circular dichroism spectroscopy and electrophoretic mobility shift assays with G-quadruplex-specific ligands revealed that the G-rich motif, located immediately downstream of the transcription start site (TSS), forms a G-quadruplex structure in vitro. By using a series of mutant forms of H19 harboring deletion or G-to-A substitutions, we found that the H19-G-quadruplex regulates H19 gene expression. We further showed that transcription factors Sp1 and E2F1 were associated with the H19-G-quadruplex to either suppress or promote the H19 transcription, respectively. Moreover, H19 expression during differentiation of mouse embryonic stem cells appears to be regulated by a genomic H19 G-quadruplex. These results demonstrate that the G-quadruplex structure immediately downstream of the TSS functions as a novel regulatory element for H19 gene expression.
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