4.5 Article

Binding of AlF-C, an Orc1-binding transcriptional regulator, enhances replicator activity of the rat aldolase B origin

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 23, Pages 8770-8780

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/MCB.00949-06

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A region encompassing the rat aldolase B gene (aldB) promoter acts as a chromosomal origin of DNA replication (origin) in rat aldolase B-nonexpressing hepatoma cells. To examine replicator function of the aldB origin, we constructed recombinant mouse cell lines in which the rat aldB origin and the mutant derivatives were inserted into the same position at the mouse chromosome 8 by ere-mediated recombination. Nascent strand abundance assays revealed that the rat origin acts as a replicator at the ectopic mouse locus. Mutation of site C in the rat origin, which binds an Orc1-binding protein AIF-C in vitro, resulted in a significant reduction of the replicator activity in the mouse cells. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays indicated that the reduction of replicator activity was paralleled with the reduced binding of AIF-C and Orc1, suggesting that sequence-specific binding of AIF-C to the ectopic rat origin leads to enhanced replicator activity in cooperation with Orc1. Involvement of AIF-C in replication in vivo was further examined for the aldB origin at its original rat locus and for a different rat origin identified in the present study, which contained an AIF-C-binding site. ChIP assays revealed that both replication origins bind AIF-C and Orc1. We think that the results presented here may represent one mode of origin recognition in mammalian cells.

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