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Biology of Reproduction 59, 704-710 (1998)
©Copyright 1998 Society for the Study of Reproduction, Inc.

The TE Promoter Element of the Histone H1t Gene Is Essential for Transcription in Transgenic Mouse Primary Spermatocytes1

Jane M. vanWerta,b, Heather R. Panekb, Steven A. Wolfea,b, , and Sidney R. Grimes2,a,b

a Research Service (151), Overton Brooks Veterans Administration Medical Center, Shreveport, Louisiana 71101–4295 b Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Louisiana State University Medical Center, Shreveport, Louisiana 71130–3932

Transcriptional activation of the testis-specific histone H1t gene occurs in pachytene primary spermatocytes during spermatogenesis. Specific binding of testis nuclear proteins to a rat histone H1t promoter sequence, designated the H1t/TE element, correlates with the onset of transcription. This element, located between the H1t/AC box and the H1t/CCAAT box, contains inverted repeats of a shorter element. When the native rat H1t gene along with flanking sequences, including 2453 base pairs (bp) upstream and 3784 bp downstream from the coding region, was microinjected into mouse embryos, the offspring of the resulting transgenic mice transcribed the transgene in a tissue-specific manner and only in primary spermatocytes. In the present study the TE promoter element was deleted and replaced with a heterologous stuffer DNA fragment. When the mutant rat DNA fragment was used to create transgenic mice, offspring of the mice bearing the promoter mutation did not transcribe the rat H1t gene in any tissue. On the other hand, transcription of the rat H4t transgene, which is located approximately 1.5 kilobases downstream from the H1t gene, occurred in these animals. Therefore, these studies support the hypothesis that the TE element is essential for enhanced testis-specific transcription of the H1t gene in primary spermatocytes.

1 This research was supported by a Merit Review grant from the Department of Veterans Affairs (S.R.G.) and by NIH Grant R01 HD29381 (S.R.G.).

2 Correspondence: Sidney R. Grimes, Medical Research Service (151), Overton Brooks Veterans Administration Medical Center, 510 E. Stoner Ave., Shreveport, LA 71101–4295. FAX: (318) 429–5733; srgrimes{at}prysm.net




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Copyright © 1998 by the Society for the Study of Reproduction.