Spliced oct-1 mRNA Isoforms with Untranslated Exons and a Partly Deleted Region Coding for the POU-Specific Domain

  • Deyev, I. E.
  • Zhenilo, S. V.
  • Polanovsky, O. L.
Molecular Biology 37(1):p 125-131, January-February 2003.

Transcription factor Oct-1 is involved in expression regulation of housekeeping genes, in lymphocyte differentiation, and in the immune response. Tissue-specific oct-1 mRNA isoforms are known to be expressed in lymphoid cells. Four new mouse isoforms were identified. Of these, two were tissue-specific (oct-1Rα and oct-1Rβ) and contained exon 1L. The oct-1Rα was shown to contain an additional fragment, which corresponds to an exon located in the 3"-region of mouse otf-1. No homolog was found in human OTF-1. The oct-1Rβ isoform proved to lack an exon coding for a fragment of the POU domain. This deletion results in a loss of the first helix of the domain, and the mutant protein is devoid of affinity for octamer ATGCAAAT. Two other mRNA isoforms, oct-1d and oct-1e, were shown to contain untranslated regions between exons 1U and 2. The regions correspond to exons 1i and 2i located between exons 1U and 1L in the 5"-region of the mouse oct-1 gene. Human OTF-1 was not found to contain exon 1i. On evidence of these and published data, it was assumed that a set of oct-1 isoforms is present in the cell, reflecting the complexity of expression regulation of оct-l and the multiplicity of its functions.

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