4.8 Article

Sequence elements within an HSP70 promoter counteract transcriptional transgene silencing in Chlamydomonas

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 31, Issue 4, Pages 445-455

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-313X.2002.01371.x

Keywords

Chlamydomonas; transgene expression; chromatin; HSP70; transcriptional gene silencing; synthetic promoters

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We have shown previously that the HSP70A (A) promoter, when fused upstream of other promoters, significantly improves their performance in driving transgene expression in Chlamydomonas. Here, we employed the bacterial resistance gene ble, driven by the RBCS2 (R) promoter or an AR promoter fusion, to determine, by which mechanism(s) the A promoter may exert its enhancing effect. We observed that transformation rates of AR-ble constructs were significantly higher than those of R-ble constructs. However, ble mRNA levels in pools of transformants generated with either construct type were the same. Co-transformation experiments revealed that the R-ble transgene was silenced in 80% of the transformants, whereas this fraction was reduced to 36% in transformants harbouring the AR-ble transgene. We conclude that the A promoter acts by decreasing the probability that a transgene becomes transcriptionally silenced. We mapped two elements within the A promoter that are responsible for this effect. The core of the first element appears to be located between nucleotides -7 and +67 relative to the HSP70A transcriptional start site. Its activity is strongly dependent on its spatial setting with respect to the R promoter and is increased by upstream sequences (- 196 to -8). The second element is independent of the first and is located to the region from - 754 to - 197. Its activity is spacing-independent and additive to the first element.

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