J. Mol. Evol.

An unexpected feature of the large mammalian genome is the frequent occurrence of closely linked head-to-head gene pairs. Close apposition of such gene pairs has been suggested to be due to sharing of regulatory elements. We show here that the head-to-head gene pair encoding two small heat shock proteins, alphaB-crystallin and HspB2, is closely linked in all major mammalian clades, suggesting that this close linkage is of selective advantage. Yet alphaB-crystallin is abundantly expressed in lens and muscle and in response to a heat shock, while HspB2 is abundant only in muscle and not upregulated by a heat shock. The intergenic distance between the genes for these two proteins in mammals ranges from 645 bp (platypus) to 1069 bp (opossum), with an average of about 900 bp; in chicken the distance was the same as in duck (1.6 kb). Phylogenetic footprinting and sequence alignment identified a number of conserved sequence elements close to the HspB2 promoter and two farther upstream. All known regulatory elements of the mouse alphaB-crystallin promoter are conserved, except in platypus and birds. The lens-specific region 1 (LSR1) and the heat shock elements (HSEs) lack in birds; in platypus the LSR1 is reduced to a Pax-6 site, while the Pax-6 site in LSR2 and a HSE are absent. Most likely the primordial mammalian alphaB-crystallin promoter had two LSRs and two HSEs. In transfection experiments the platypus alphaB-crystallin promoter retained heat shock responsiveness and lens expression. It also directed lens expression in Xenopus laevis transgenes, as did the HspB2 promoter of rat or blind mole rat. Deletion of the middle of the intergenic region including the upstream enhancer affected the activity of both the rat alphaB-crystallin and the HspB2 promoters, suggesting sharing of the enhancer region by the two promoters.

Source:http://purl.uniprot.org/citations/15693623

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An unexpected feature of the large mammalian genome is the frequent occurrence of closely linked head-to-head gene pairs. Close apposition of such gene pairs has been suggested to be due to sharing of regulatory elements. We show here that the head-to-head gene pair encoding two small heat shock proteins, alphaB-crystallin and HspB2, is closely linked in all major mammalian clades, suggesting that this close linkage is of selective advantage. Yet alphaB-crystallin is abundantly expressed in lens and muscle and in response to a heat shock, while HspB2 is abundant only in muscle and not upregulated by a heat shock. The intergenic distance between the genes for these two proteins in mammals ranges from 645 bp (platypus) to 1069 bp (opossum), with an average of about 900 bp; in chicken the distance was the same as in duck (1.6 kb). Phylogenetic footprinting and sequence alignment identified a number of conserved sequence elements close to the HspB2 promoter and two farther upstream. All known regulatory elements of the mouse alphaB-crystallin promoter are conserved, except in platypus and birds. The lens-specific region 1 (LSR1) and the heat shock elements (HSEs) lack in birds; in platypus the LSR1 is reduced to a Pax-6 site, while the Pax-6 site in LSR2 and a HSE are absent. Most likely the primordial mammalian alphaB-crystallin promoter had two LSRs and two HSEs. In transfection experiments the platypus alphaB-crystallin promoter retained heat shock responsiveness and lens expression. It also directed lens expression in Xenopus laevis transgenes, as did the HspB2 promoter of rat or blind mole rat. Deletion of the middle of the intergenic region including the upstream enhancer affected the activity of both the rat alphaB-crystallin and the HspB2 promoters, suggesting sharing of the enhancer region by the two promoters.
skos:exactMatch
uniprot:name
J. Mol. Evol.
uniprot:author
Dirks R.P., Doerwald L., Lubsen N.H., Madsen O., Martens G.J., Rexwinkel R., de Jong W.W., van Genesen S.T., van Rheede T.
uniprot:date
2004
uniprot:pages
674-686
uniprot:title
Sequence and functional conservation of the intergenic region between the head-to-head genes encoding the small heat shock proteins alphaB-crystallin and HspB2 in the mammalian lineage.
uniprot:volume
59
dc-term:identifier
doi:10.1007/s00239-004-2659-y