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J. Virol., 02 1995, 1142-1149, Vol 69, No. 2
M Yamauchi, B Freitag, C Khan, B Berwin and E Barklis
Using modified nuclear lysis and binding conditions, we have examined the
binding of an embryonal carcinoma (EC) cell factor, binding factor A, to a
stem cell-specific silencer which acts at the DNA level and overlaps the
Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) proline primer binding site (PBS).
Following our protocol, we found that in vitro binding of factor A
correlated with the in vivo activity of the M-MuLV silencer. Factor A bound
specifically to the wild-type silencer element at room temperature and 30
degrees C, but not at 4 degrees C, and bound 10-fold better to the
full-length silencer than to a minimal silencer core element. The factor
was enriched in nuclear compared with cytosolic extracts and in
undifferentiated EC cells compared with differentiated cells in which the
silencer is nonfunctional. Salt and ion requirements for factor A binding
were investigated, and partial purification steps indicated the factor to
be a heparin-Sepharose- binding moiety of greater than 100 kDa. To examine
possible relationships between silencer and PBS activities, sequences
representing phenylalanine, isoleucine, lysine-1,2, lysine-3, methionine,
and tryptophan PBS DNA fragments were tested in vivo for stem cell-specific
repression of M-MuLV expression and in vitro in DNA binding assays. Of
these PBS elements, only the lysine-1,2 PBS DNA fragment showed
consistently high levels of repression. Interestingly, the lysine-1,2 PBS
DNA fragment also formed a complex with an EC cell factor with
characteristics similar to those of factor A. However, the two factors did
not cross-compete in binding studies, suggesting that they may be different
but related factors. Our results suggest that expression of Mason-Pfizer
monkey virus, visna virus, and spumavirus, which use the lysine-1,2 PBS,
may be inhibited in undifferentiated stem cells.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Stem cell factor binding to retrovirus primer binding site silencers
Vollum Institute for Advanced Biomedical Research, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland 97201.
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