Rat tenascin-R gene: structure, chromosome location and transcriptional activity of promoter and exon 1.

Authors: Leprini, A  Gherzi, R  Vecchi, E  Borsi, L  Zardi, L  Siri, A 
Citation: Leprini A, etal., Cytogenet Cell Genet 1998;83(1-2):115-23.
Pubmed: (View Article at PubMed) PMID:9925948
DOI: Full-text: DOI:15146

Tenascin-R is an extracellular matrix protein expressed exclusively in the central nervous system where it is thought to play a relevant role in regulating neurite outgrowth. We have i) cloned the cDNA of the rat tenascin-R 5' region; ii) defined its genomic organization, obtaining the sequence of two novel untranslated exons; iii) mapped the gene to rat chromosome 13q23 and suggested a previously unreported synteny between rat chromosome 13q23, human chromosome 1q24, and mouse chromosome 4E; and iv) sequenced and characterized the elements responsible for its neural cell-restricted transcription. We found that two discrete regions of the rat gene (the first in the proximal promoter, the second in the first exon) are independently able to activate to a high degree the transcription of a reporter gene in either human or rat neuroblastoma cell lines but not in other cell lines. Based on this observation, we re-evaluated the arrangement of transcriptionally active regions in the human tenascin-R gene we recently cloned and found that the human gene also contains an exon sequence able to initiate and sustain transcription independently of promoter sequences.

Annotation

Gene Ontology Annotations
RGD Objects Annotated

Additional Information

 
RGD Object Information
RGD ID: 634496
Created: 2003-08-29
Species: All Species
Last Modified: 2003-08-29
Status: ACTIVE