In Arabidopsis thaliana, the tef1 box is a cis-acting promoter element of the EF-1 alpha A1 gene involved in the activation of transcription in meristematic tissues. The initiation of root calli in transgenic Arabidopsis by 2,4-D shows that the tef1-dependent expression of the GUS reporter gene is not restricted to meristematic regions but involves all of the cycling cells. Hybridization experiments conducted using Arabidopsis cDNA clones organized in a dense array on filters, and cDNA probes prepared from cells in various states of growth, or blocked at different steps of the cell cycle, indicate that the enhanced expression of EF-1 alpha genes occurs in cycling cells at the point of entry into the cell cycle and remains constant during transit through the cycle. The analysis of several promoters of genes, other than EF-1 alpha, which are overexpressed in growing cells and involved in the processes of translation or redox regulation, reveals the presence of sequences showing partial homologies with the tef1 box. The Arabidopsis ribosomal gene srp18 and the tobacco gene thioh2, encoding a thioredoxin h, contain such sequences. Gel retardation experiments suggest that these sequences are targets for the same proteins as those that interact with the tef1 box of the Arabidopsis EF-1 alpha A1 gene. In transfected Arabidopsis protoplasts, the putative tef1 sequence thioh2 partially restores the activity of a tef1 box-less EF-1 alpha A1 promoter. These data demonstrate that the tef1 box is a ubiquitous cis-acting element involved in the transcriptional activation of plant genes that are overexpressed in cycling cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02191710 | DOI Listing |
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