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The Regulation of Alkaline Phosphatase during the Development of Dictyostelium

Regulation of gene expression is known to be a critical factor involved in proper development, responses to environmental cues, metabolism, energy conservation, and disease. Gene expression is regulated at several levels including transcription, mRNA splicing, post translational modification, and the rate of protein degradation. The developmental control of <i>alkaline phosphatase</i> (alp) in <i>Dicytostelium</i> has provided a focal point for the study of gene regulation at the level of <i>de novo</i> synthesis.

The localization of <i>alkaline phosphatase</i> (alp) expression during development was characterized by fusing the 5' flanking sequence to the <i>lacZ</i> reporter and using an <i>in situ</i> β-galactosidase staining method. The localization of </i>lacZ</i> expression corresponds with that of the endogenous ALP enzyme suggesting that <i>alp</i> is regulated at the level of transcription. In order to identify temporal regulatory elements within the <i>alp</i> promoter a series of 5' and internal promoter deletions were generated and fused to the <i>lacZ</i> reporter. The data from these promoter deletion constructs indicated a regulatory element within the -683 to -468 bp sequence that is required for normal expression of <i>alp</i> during development. A series of small internal and 5' promoter deletions were designed within the -683 to -468 bp regulatory sequence. The results from these promoter deletion-reporter gene fusions suggested a DNA regulatory element is located within a 26-bp sequence beginning at the -620 bp site.

The function of <i>cis</i>-acting regulatory elements were evaluated using the electromobility shift assay (EMSA) to identify sequence specific DNA-protein interactions on the <i>alp promoter</i>. We report the characterization of three DNA-binding activities with the 20% ammonium sulfate (AS) slug nuclear fraction. These DNA-binding activities appear to be related as they all require magnesium or calcium for effective binding to the <i>alp</i> promoter. Interestingly, the DNA-binding proteins appeared to interact with a GT-rich sequence that contained a G-box binding factor (GBF) consensus element.

Additionally, a DNA-binding activity observed in the 80% AS slug nuclear extract was characterized and sequentially purified using conventional and affinity chromatography techniques. The DNA-binding protein was identified as TFII, a protein that was previously identified during the investigation of <i>glycogen phosphorylase-2 (gp2)</i> regulation. A comparison of the <i>alp</i> and <i>gp2</i> probes used to identify TFII suggests a DNA-binding site, ACAATGN₈₋₁₂CACTA. The ability of TFII to bind specifically with the promoter of two functionally different genes suggests that it may regulate the temporal and/or spatial expression of several <i>Dictyostelium</i> genes. / Ph. D.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/27646
Date12 June 2006
CreatorsJoyce, Bradley Ryan
ContributorsBiology, Rutherford, Charles L., Stevens, Ann M., Melville, Stephen B., Gregory, Eugene M., Sible, Jill C.
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
Formatapplication/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
RelationJoyce-Dissertation.pdf

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