AU5406501A - CD95 regulatory gene sequences and transcription factors - Google Patents

CD95 regulatory gene sequences and transcription factors Download PDF

Info

Publication number
AU5406501A
AU5406501A AU54065/01A AU5406501A AU5406501A AU 5406501 A AU5406501 A AU 5406501A AU 54065/01 A AU54065/01 A AU 54065/01A AU 5406501 A AU5406501 A AU 5406501A AU 5406501 A AU5406501 A AU 5406501A
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
seq
gene
dna
polynucleotide
polypeptide
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
AU54065/01A
Inventor
Fritz Rudert
James D. Watson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Genesis Research and Development Corp Ltd
Original Assignee
Genesis Research and Development Corp Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Genesis Research and Development Corp Ltd filed Critical Genesis Research and Development Corp Ltd
Priority to AU54065/01A priority Critical patent/AU5406501A/en
Publication of AU5406501A publication Critical patent/AU5406501A/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Landscapes

  • Medicines That Contain Protein Lipid Enzymes And Other Medicines (AREA)

Description

P00011 Regulation 3.2 Revised 2/98
AUSTRALIA
Patents Act, 1990
ORIGINAL
COMPLETE SPECIFICATION STANDARD PATENT TO BE COMPLETED BY THE APPLICANT NAME OF APPLICANT: ACTUAL INVENTORS: ADDRESS FOR SERVICE: INVENTION TITLE: DETAILS OF ASSOCIATED
APPLICATION:
Genesis Research Development Corporation Limited James D Watson and Fritz Rudert Peter Maxwell Associates Level 6 60 Pitt Street SYDNEY NSW 2000 CD95 REGULATORY GENE SEQUENCES AND TRANSCRIPTION
FACTORS
Divisional of Australian Patent Application No. 40,367/97 filed on 29 August 1997 The following statement is a full description of this invention including the best method of performing it known to us:- REGULATORY GENE SEQUENCES AND TRANSCRIPTION
FACTORS
Field of the Invention The present invention relates, generally, to regulation of expression of a gene encoding the CD95 receptor, which plays an important role in apoptosis, or programmed cell death. More specifically, the present invention relates to regulation of CD95 gene expression through identification of regulatory sites on the gene, proteinaceous transcription factors that bind to the CD95 regulatory sites, and methods for regulating CD95 gene transcription and expression.
Background of the Invention Apoptosis is a cell suicide mechanism that is used by multicellular organisms to regulate physiological cell death for purposes of defense, development, homeostasis and aging. Apoptosis is an active process modulated by its own regulatory system and genetics and is generally characterized by morphological changes including loss of contact of a cell with its neighbors, chromatin condensation, membrane blebbing, cytoplasmic condensation, DNA fragmentation and, eventually, the generation of membrane-enclosed apoptotic bodies that are phagocytosed by neighboring cells.
20 CD95 (also referred to as Fas or APO-1) is an important receptor in apoptosis. Apoptotic cell death is triggered by an interaction of the CD95 receptor with its ligand CD95L. CD95 is a member of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor family of cell surface proteins, and CD95L is a member of the TNF family of membrane and secreted proteins. CD95 is expressed on a wide variety of cell 25 types, either constitutively or inducibly. CD95 is expressed, for example, on activated T and B cells, and its mRNA has been detected in other tissues including thymus, spleen, liver, ovary, lung, and heart.
0 CD95 has been implicated in mediating nonspecific T-cell cytotoxicity and activation-induced cell death (AICD) in the peripheral immune system. When apoptosis is induced in T cells by activation through an antigen receptor, signals are passed into the cell, leading to activation of the cell and expression of c-myc. The cell up-regulates both CD95 and CD95L and expresses them on the cell surface.
These molecules then interact with each other, in an autocrine or paracrine manner, initiating the cell death-inducing signaling pathway. Overexpression of receptor signaling domain results in apoptosis and cell death.
Regulating apoptosis has therapeutic and/or prophylactic implications for diseases where apoptosis causes the pathology, including chronic neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases and multiple sclerosis, and immunosuppressive disorders, both genetic and acquired. Similarly, regulating apoptosis may have therapeutic benefits under circumstances in which apoptosis occurs as a result of trauma, such as strokes and heart attacks. Agents that block apoptosis may be useful in treating ischemic conditions, such as heart attacks, strokes or reperfusion injury, by blocking the apoptotic response in cells.
Pathological suppression of apoptosis appears to be an important factor in neoplastic diseases and viral infection. Apoptosis is suppressed, for example, in proliferating tumor cells. HIV/AIDS infection produces unregulated and untimely apoptosis in crucial defenders of the immune system, namely CD-4 cells. Moreover, modulation of apoptosis may increase tolerance to pharmaceutical agents such as chemotherapeutic and radiotherapeutic agents that stress but, in the absence of an apoptotic mechanism, may not kill cells. Regulation of apoptosis may also have implications for in vitro cell growth and maintenance and may be used to produce 20 more robust cell lines and increase production of recombinant proteins.
The numerous applications in which regulation of apoptosis may play an important role underscore the importance of developing a more complete understanding of expression of the CD95 receptor. Identification of regulatory sequences on the CD95 gene, as well as transcription factors that bind to such 25 regulatory sequences, will provide means for modulating transcription and expression of this important receptor, thereby providing a means to regulate apoptosis.
Disclosure of the Invention In one aspect, the present invention provides novel, isolated and purified polynucleotides that are involved in transcriptional regulation of the CD95 receptor and variants thereof which possess similar regulatory properties. Polynucleotides that play a role in enhancing and silencing transcription from the CD95 promoter are disclosed. Regulatory polynucleotides of the present invention are located in a region about 1 kb upstream from the coding portion of the CD95 gene. Presently preferred polynucleotides that function as regulatory elements in the enhancement of transcription from the CD95 promoter are described in SEQ ID NOS: 1 and 37.
The polynucleotide identified as SEQ ID NO: 1 exhibits enhancing regulatory activity, but. contains both enhancer and silencer regulatory elements. The polynucleotide identified as SEQ ID NO: 37, which exhibits enhancing but not silencing regulatory activity, is especially preferred as an enhancing regulatory element. A presently preferred polynucleotide that functions as a regulatory element in silencing transcription from the CD95 promoter is described in SEQ ID NO: 2.
In another aspect, the present invention discloses novel isolated and purified polynucleotides that provide sites for binding of transcription factors that regulate transcription from the CD95 promoter. All or a portion of the polynucleotide sequences described in SEQ ID NOS: 1 and 2 provide binding sites for transcription factors that modulate transcription of coding portions of the CD95 gene. A presently preferred polynucleotide sequence consensus motif that provides a binding site for transcription factor(s) that enhance transcription from the CD95 promoter is set forth in SEQ ID NO: 3. Additional preferred polynucleotides that provide sites for binding 20 of transcription factors that enhance transcription from the CD95 promoter are set forth in SEQ ID NOS: 4, 5, 6 and 37. Additional preferred polynucleotides that provide sites for binding of a transcription factor that silences transcription from the promoter are set forth in SEQ ID NOS: 7 and 36.
Yet another aspect of the present, invention relates to proteinaceous binding 25 molecules, or polypeptides, referred to as transcription factors, that bind specifically to the CD95 silencer and enhancer regions described above to enhance or inhibit transcription of the CD95 gene. Binding of an enhancer transcription factor to an enhancer regulatory region stimulates CD95 expression; binding of a silencer transcription factor to a silencer regulatory region inhibits CD95 expression. The term "CD95 transcription factor," as used herein, refers to any one of a series of polypeptides which are capable of binding to polynucleotides that regulate transcription and/or expression of CD95. CD95 transcription factors derived from human, as well as other mammalian species, and partially or wholly synthesized polypeptides are within the scope of this invention.
Transcription factors that bind to polynucleotide probes corresponding to the enhancer regulatory sequences described above (SEQ ID NOS: 1, 3-6 and 37) form distinct DNA/polypeptide complexes having molecular weights of approximately 59 kDa, 113 kDa and 200-300 kDa. Experimental evidence demonstrates that transcription factors capable of binding to CD95 enhancer regulatory polynucleotides exhibit double stranded binding activity. Transcription factors that bind to polynucleotide probes corresponding to all or a portion of the silencer regulatory polynucleotide sequences (SEQ ID NOS: 2, 7 and 36) form distinct DNA/polypeptide complexes having molecular weights of approxiniately 47 kDa, 77 kDa and 100 kDa. Experimental evidence demonstrates that transcription factors capable of binding to CD95 silencer regulatory polynucleotides exhibit single stranded binding activity.
Several specific transcription factors that bind to CD95 regulatory polynucleotides and thereby modulate expression of CD95 have been identified experimentally. Polypeptide transcription factors that bind to the CD95 silencer regulatory polynucleotide sequences include human YB-I (EMBL Accession No.
M24070, SWISS-PROT Accession No. P16990); rat YB-1 (EMBL Accession No.
20 M57299, SWISS-PROT Accession No. P22568); rat Pura (SEQ ID NOS: 38, 39, 41 and 42); and a rat Pura-like protein (SEQ ID NOS: 40 and 43). Binding of these silencer transcription factors to a CD95 silencer regulatory polynucleotide inhibits expression of CD95 and thereby tends to inhibit apoptotic cell death. Polypeptide transcription factors that bind to the CD95 enhancer regulatory polynucleotide SEQ 25 ID NO: 11 include human YB-1 and human hnRNP D. Binding of this enhancer transcription factor to a CD95 enhancer regulatory polynucleotide stimulates expression of CD95 and thereby tends to stimulate apoptotic cell death.
YB-1 is the 47 kD protein species observed by Southwestern and UV-crosslinking analysis with the CD95 silencer probe (SEQ ID NO: YB-I is also known as human dbpB or CCAAT-binding transcription factor 1 subunit A (CBF-A) or EFIa or MDR NF-I (EMBL Accession No. M24070; SWISS-PROT Accession No. P16990); bovine EFIA#1 (EMBL Accession No. M95793; SWISS- PROT Accession No. P16990); rat dbpB or EFla or CBF-A (EMBL Accession No.
M57299; SWISS-PROT Accession No. P22568); murine CBF-A or MUSY1 or MSY1 or MUSYB (EMBL Accession No. M60419; SWISS-PROT Accession No. P27817) or MYB-IA (EMBL Accession No. U33196; SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q60950) or MYB-1B (EMBL Accession No. U33197; SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q60951); rabbit MRNP p50 (EMBL Accession No. U16821; SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q28618); avian EFla or RSV-EF-1 (EMBL Accession No. L13032; SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q06066) or pYBa (EMBL Accession No. U43513; SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q90376); and frog FRGY1 (EMBL Accession No. M59453; SWISS-PROT Accession No. P21573), and has been described as a 42-50 kD protein. YB-1 is a member of a highly conserved nucleic acid-binding polypeptide family containing a cold-shock domain known as the Y-box family of proteins. The cold shock domain of the Y-box nucleic acid-binding polypeptide family has been identified as a 66 amino acid region, is believed to be the DNAbinding domain, and is highly conserved. These proteins are described in Wolffe et al. (1992), The Y-box factors: a family of nucleic acid binding polypeptides conserved from Eschericia coli to man, New Biol. 4, 280-298.
Other members of the Y-box family of binding proteins that contain a coldshock domain include human dbpA (EMBL Accession No. M24069; SWISS-PROT 20 Accession No. P16989); human dbpA-like protein (EMBL Accession No. X95325; SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q14121), human dbpB-like protein (EMBL Accession No. L28809; SWISS-PROT Accession No. P16990), human NSEP-1 (EMBL Accession No. M83234; SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q14972), and human nuclease sensitive element binding protein-1 (EMBL Accession No. M85234; S. 25 SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q15325); rat YB-2 (EMBL Accession No. U22893; SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q62764) and rat RYB-a; murine dbpA (EMBL Accession No. D14485; SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q61478); frog FRGY2 or p56 or MRNP4 or YB-2 (EMBL Accession No. M59454; SWISS-PROT Accession No.
P21574) and frog p54 or MRNP3 (EMBL Accession No. M80257, SWISS-PROT Accession No. P45441); and bacterial cspA and cspB. Many other members of the nucleic acid-binding Y-box polypeptide family having a cold shock domain, such as proteins from lower organisms, also exhibit homology and would bind to the regulatory polynucleotides of the present invention. Polypeptides having a cold shock domain having at least 95% and preferbly at least 98% identity to the cold shock domain of human YB-1 (EMBL Accession No. M24070; SWISS-PROT Accession No. P16990) are considered to be members of the Y-box family of binding polypeptides and are especially preferred for use in compositions and methods of the present invention.
YB-1 binds to both double-and single-stranded DNA, although it has been shown to preferentially bind single-stranded DNA. It has also been shown to induce or stabilize a single-stranded conformation in DNA. YB-1 has been described as a transcription factor for a number of genes and, in particular, as an activator of a number of growth-associated genes, including epidermal growt, factor (EGF) receptor gene and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)/cyclin gene. It has also been shown to be an activator of the human multidrug resistant pump (mdrl) gene.
YB-1 has also been shown to be a repressor of the MHC Class II genes and to stimulate transcription of the LTRs of both the human T-cell lymphotropic virus-1 (HTVL-1) and human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1). A number of tumor cells have very high levels of CD95L mRNA, and negligible levels of CD95 mRNA (e.g.
lung, colon, liver and skin carcinomas). These levels are the inverse of what is found in non-malignant cells. It is believed that the lack of CD95 expression allows 20 tumors to evade the cytolytic T-cells through the expression of CD95L, so inducing apoptosis of the activated T-cells. Furthermore, the levels of mdr and/or PCNA and/or EGF receptor mRNAs are often higher in tumor cells than non-malignant cells. YB-1 activates expression of all of these genes and, at the same time, represses CD95 gene transcription. This suggests that YB-1 and the Y-box family of 25 proteins are involved in the biology of malignancies. Modulation of CD95 gene transcription through modulation of the binding of a Y-box protein to the identified CD95 silencer polynucleotides, renders the activated T-cells less susceptible to apoptosis and, at the same time, confers resistance to cytotoxic drugs. Modulation of expression of CD95 may also be used to promote apoptosis of malignant cells by means of an auto-induced or T-cell mediated mechanism.
Pura, also known as ssCRE-BP or SPSF I is a 34-42 kD protein that has single-stranded DNA-binding activity. Human Pura (EMBL Accession No.
M96684; SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q00577) and murine Pura (EMBL Accession No. U02098; SWISS-PROT Accession No. P42669) have been fully sequenced. Human, murine and rat Pura are highly conserved; human and murine Pura are 99.3% identical. Pura often occurs as a dimer or oligomer.
The 5' portion of the rat Pura transcription factor isolated and identified by applicants is encoded by the polynucleotide identified as SEQ ID NO: 38, and the 3' portion of the rat Pura transcription factor isolated and identified by applicants is encoded by the polynucleotide identified as SEQ ID NO: 39. The polypeptides encoded by the polynucleotides set out in SEQ ID NOS: 38 and 39 are identified in SEQ ID NOS: 41 and 42, respectively. Polypeptides having at least 95% identity and preferably at least 98% identity to human Pura (EMBL Accession No. M96684; SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q00577) are preferred for use in the compositions and methods of the present invention. The polypeptides identified in SEQ ID NOS: 41 and 42 are also encompassed within the term "Pura," and transcription factors comprising the polypeptides identified in SEQ ID NOS: 41 and 42 are also preferred for use in compositions and methods of the present invention.
Pur a has been shown to be a factor involved in cell cycle control of DNA S replication and also transcription. Like YB-1 mRNA, Pura mRNA has been found in every tissue examined. As a transcription factor, Pura has been implicated in the 20 control of transcription of genes activated by two different retroviruses human polyoma virus (JCV) and the Rous sarcoma virus (v-src). Pura interacts with YBto bind to sequences of the JCV enhancer and it is believed that this may induce the shift from early to late viral gene transcription. Pura has also been shown to interact with the human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) Tat protein to activate transcription of JCV. Tat has been implicated in modulating apoptosis of CD4' T cells in HIV-l-infected persons. Thus, an interaction of Tat and Pura may contribute at the transcriptional level to modulate the expression of in HIV-1 patients. Pura' has also been shown to associate with the Retinoblastoma protein which is encoded by a tumor suppressor gene.
Another CD95 silencer binding polypeptide having a molecular weight of 32kD, referred to as "Pura-like transcription factor" has been identified. The portion of the polynucleotide encoding the Pura-like polypeptide is provided in SEQ ID NO: 40. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the Pura-like transcription factor encoded by the polynucleotide identified as SEQ ID NO: 40 is provided in SEQ ID NO: 43. It is believed that this is a novel polypeptide transcription factor.
Transcription factors comprising the polypeptide identified in SEQ ID NO: 43 and proteins having at least 95% identity and preferably at least 98% identity to the polypeptide identified in SEQ ID NO: 43 are encompassed within the term "Puralike transcription factor(s)" and are preferred for use in compositions and methods of the present invention.
Two polypeptide transcription factors were identified that bind to the enhancer regulatory sequence and thereby modulate CD95 expression: human YB-1 and human hnRNP D (EMBL Accession No. D55672; SWISS-PROT Accession Nos. Q14101 and Q14103). Human YB-I is described above. HnRNP D is also known as hnRNP DO and AUF1 (EMBL Accession No. A54601; SWISS-PROT Accession No. Q12772), and is a heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein having a molecular weight of 33 kD. Polypeptides having at least 95% identity and preferably at least 98% identity to human hnRNP D (EMBL Accession No. D55672; SWISS-PROT Accession Nos. Q14101 and Q14103) are preferred for use in the compositions and methods of the present invention. HnRNP D has been described as a UUAG-specific RNA-binding protein. Another heterogeneous nuclear 20 ribonucleoprotein, hnRNP K, has recently been shown to be a transcription factor which activates expression of the c-myc gene promoter.
Another aspect of the present invention relates to use of the regulatory polynucleotides and/or transcription factors of the present invention to modulate transcription of the CD95 gene, as well as genes other than CD95. Modulation of transcription of the CD95 gene may be achieved, for example, by blocking the binding of transcription factors to the enhancer or silencer regulatory regions, by modulating expression of one or more transcription factors, by modulating the binding activity of one or more transcription factors, or by modulating the functional activity of one or more of the transcription factors. Modulation of transcription of the CD95 gene may be implemented to treat various conditions and disease states by selectively stimulating or inhibiting apoptotic cell death.
Blocking of the binding of transcription factors to CD95 regulatory regions may be accomplished, for example, by introducing small molecules, such as oligodeoxyribonucleotides, synthetic polyamides, or other small molecules that target specific CD95 regulatory sequences to control gene expression by preventing the binding of transcription factors. Specifically, introduction of small molecules that target and bind to, or otherwise associate with, the regulatory sequences identified as SEQ ID NOS: 1-7, 36 and 39 to inhibit the binding of transcription factors are preferred. The identification and development of suitable small molecules is described, for example, in Cai et al. (1996), Transcription-modulating drugs: mechanism and selectivity, Curr. Opin. Biotechnol. 7 608-615 and Gottesfeld et al. (1997), Regulation of gene expression by small molecules, Nature 387 (6629) 202-205.
Blocking of the binding of transcription factors to CD95 regulatory regions may additionally or alternatively be accomplished, for example, using oligonucleotide-directed triple helix formation. The use of such methods is documented, for example, in Maher, L.J. (1992), DNA triple-helix formation: an approach to artificial gene repressors, Bioessays 14 807-815 and Chan et al.
(1997), Triplex DNA: fundamentals, advances and potential applications for gene therapy, J. Mol. Med. 75 267-282.
20 Alternatively, transcription factors may be inhibited from binding to regulatory regions by introducing an excess of one or more polynucleotides, .specifically polynucleotides comprising the regulatory sequences identified as SEQ ID NOS: 1-7, 36 and 37. Excess polynucleotides may be introduced using a variety of techniques which are well known in the art. Overexpressing a polynucleotide 25 comprising a YB-I transcription factor binding sequence (SEQ ID NOS: 2 or 36) in cells, for example, would result in binding of endogenous YB-I to the introduced polynucleotides. There would consequently be insufficient endogenous YB-I to S" bind to the CD95 silencer regulatory region, which would result in activation of the transcription of Modulating the expression of transcription factors may be accomplished, for example, by inhibiting translation of the relevant transcription factors. Translation of the relevant transcription factors may be inhibited, for example, by introducing antisense expression vectors; by introducing antisense oligodeoxyribonucleotides or antisense phosphorothioate oligodeoxyribonucleotides; by introducing antisense oligoribonucleotides or antisense phosphorothioate oligoribonucleotides; or by other means which are well known in the art. The use of techniques involving antisense polynucleotides is well known in the art and is described, for example, in Robinson- Benion et al. (1995), Antisense techniques, Methods in Enzymol. 254 363-375 and Kawasaki et al. (1996), Artific. Organs 20 836-848.
Desired transcription factors may alternatively be overexpressed by introducing DNA constructs that code for a desired enhancer or silencer transcription factor to increase the population of the desired transcription factor. Suitable DNA constructs comprise a polynucleotide encoding the relevant transcription factor and suitable promoter and terminator sequences. Specifically, preferred polynucleotides for use in such DNA constructs include polynucleotides encoding a member of the Y-box family of binding proteins, polynucleotides encoding a Pura protein, including SEQ ID NOS: 38 and 39, polynucleotides encoding a Pura-like protein, including SEQ ID NO: 40, and polynucleotides encoding a hnRNP D protein.
Methods for making, introducing and expressing such DNA constructs are well known in the art.
Transcription of the CD95 gene and expression of CD95 may alternatively 20 be modulated by modulating the activity or function of one or more transcription factors. This may be accomplished, for example, by introducing drugs that interact with the transcription factors to inhibit or activate their binding activity or function.
Modulation of genes other than CD95 according to the methods described above may be accomplished for example, by making a DNA construct in which 25 coding portions of selected genes are operably linked with a regulatory polynucleotide of the present invention and a suitable promoter. Appropriate transcription factors may be introduced in vitro or in vivo and play a role in modulating transcription and expression-of the selected gene. Similarly, any of the techniques described above for modulating expression of CD95 may be adapted for modulating expression of other genes operably linked with a regulatory sequence of the present invention. Techniques for synthesizing functional DNA constructs of this type are well known.
Yet another aspect of the present invention relates to the identification of transcriptional start sites. Several such sites are identified below.
The regulatory polynucleotides and transcription factors of the present invention have numerous uses and applications. Such polynucleotides and transcription factors are useful, for example, for studying regulation of transcription, and for modulating transcription and expression of coding portions of the CD95 gene, or other genes, as described above, both in vitro and in vivo.
Regulatory polynucleotides and CD95 transcription factors of the present invention are useful for studying regulation of CD95 both in vitro and in vivo. For example, regulatory polynucleotides and CD95 transcription factors are useful for identifying cell types and populations having CD95 transcription enhancing and/or silencing regulatory capabilities. Numerous techniques may be employed. Using regulatory polynucleotides as probes, for example, nuclear extracts from various cell sources may be screened by electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) for the presence or absence of the respective DNA/polypeptide complexes.
Expression of transcription factors capable of binding to such probes can be directly assayed by amplifying a portion of their cDNAs, for example by polymerase chain reaction or by detecting mRNA for these factors using DNA/RNA or RNA/RNA hybridization techniques, such as Northern analysis or RNase protection 20 assays. The CD95 silencer and enhancer polynucleotides may also be used to screen for the presence and/or activity of the respective regulatory factors in a cell transfection system, wherein expression of various well established reporter genes, such as chloramphenicol acetyl transferase gene, beta galactosidase gene, firefly luciferase gene, renilla luciferase gene, or green fluorescent protein gene is detected.
Identification of cell types and populations which contain CD95 regulatory factors may have significant ramifications for the development of therapeutic and prophylactic agents.
Polynucleotides of the present invention also have application for identification of modulators (positive or negative regulators) of CD95 transcription.
A screening assay, for example, may utilize transiently or stably transfected reporter constructs comprising the regulatory polynucleotides of the present invention to assess CD95 transcription. As described above, the regulatory silencer and/or .0 enhancer sequences may be fused to an appropriate promoter driving the expression of one of the above mentioned reporter genes. Such reporter constructs may be transiently transfected, e.g. by lipofection, electroporation, DEAE dextran or Caphosphate co-precipitation methods, into appropriate cell lines or primary cells.
Reporter activity may then be measured by chemiluminescent, fluorescent, ELISAbased or enzymatic methods (radioactive or non-radioactive). Such screening assays compare favorably with assays that assess the protein turnover of the CD95 receptor.
According to another aspect of the invention, the use of eukaryotic host cells transfected with regulatory polynucleotides of the present invention that mimic the regulated, inducible transcription of the CD95 gene allows identification and testing of the potency of physiological stimulators and inhibitors of CD95 trahscription.
Polynucleotides of the present invention are also useful in screening assays to identify molecules capable of binding to regulatory portions of the CD95 gene and thereby regulating transcription of the CD95 gene. Assays for identifying binding molecules using polynucleotide probes are well known in the art and include affinity purification using, for example, trapping of specific DNA/polypeptide complexes formed with biotinylated binding sequences, to a streptavidin matrix or coupling binding site-containing polynucleotides covalently to an appropriate column matrix, such as activated agarose or sepharose. The CD95 regulatory 20 polynucleotides may also be used to monitor specific binding activity of individual fractions of nuclear or whole cell extracts from appropriate sources after treatment by various biochemical and/or biophysical fractionation regimens. The regulatory polynucleotides may also be employed in a yeast one-hybrid functional cloning system. Regulatory polynucleotides may be cloned in a yeast shuttle vector 25 to activate transcription of a biosynthetic marker or a survival gene which is expressed when at least the DNA binding domain of the cognate transcription factor (provided by a cDNA library and expressed in a second vector as a hybrid with the activation domain of another, suitable transcription factor) binds to this sequence.
Identification, isolation and purification of such binding molecules provides a mechanism for modulating transcription of coding portions of the CD95 gene, both in vitro and in vivo.
Similarly, CD95 transcription factors of the present invention are useful for identification and purification of functionally associated regulatory polypeptides.
The transcription factors themselves, or monoclonal antibodies raised against them, may be used for the identification of cell types that contain such regulatory polypeptides. Well known techniques may be employed to raise monoclonal antibodies.
Polynucleotides of the present invention corresponding to regulatory portions of the CD95 gene, or portions of such polynucleotides, may be used as probes to identify and isolate corresponding genomic regions from other species.
Identification of such regions aids in identifying structurally conserved motifs which may also exhibit conserved function. Identification of conserved regulatory elements is an important predictive element for extrapolating experimental data from non-human sources to expression of the human CD95 gene.
Regulatory polynucleotides of the present invention are also useful for screening purposes to identify polynucleotides from non-human sources that exhibit homology to the identified sequences. The identification and isolation of regulatory polynucleotides makes possible the development of transgenic mammalian species having a modified CD95 gene structure lacking a silencer or enhancer regulatory region. Techniques such as homologous recombination and 20 knockout strategies are well known. Such mammalian species are useful as models for studying CD95 gene regulation and apoptosis in vivo. Transgenic species with portions of a CD95 promoter or heterologous promoter having regulatory sequences of the present invention fused to a reporter gene may be used, for example, to analyze cross-species regulatory activities of the identified polynucleotide motifs in 25 vivo. Transgenic species may also serve as in vivo models to screen for tissue specific modulators of CD95 expression. Transgenic species expressing a reporter gene, e.g. beta-galactosidase, which is driven by the CD95 promoter and enhancer, with or without silencer sequences, may also serve as in vivo models to screen for tissue specific modulators of CD95 expression. Compounds delivered to such transgenic species can be assayed for their in vivo effects on transcription of the reporter gene in the different constructs. In one mouse model of systemic autoimmunity, lpr homozygous mice, for example, the key abnormality is defective expression of the CD95 gene. (Abul K. Abbas, "Die and Let Live: Eliminating Dangerous Lymphocytes," Cell 84:655-657,1996.) Polynucleotides corresponding to regulatory portions of the CD95 gene and transcription factors also have numerous therapeutic applications. The enhancer and silencer polynucleotides may be used, for example, to co-express target/effector genes with native CD95 and thus target cells which can undergo apoptosis. CD95 regulatory polynucleotides cloned in front of the native CD95 gene promoter or a heterologous promoter could be used for regulated co-expression of inhibitors or stimulators of apoptosis in cell types which express CD95, some of which are also susceptible to activation induced cell death. Exemplary inhibitors of apoptosis are CrmA, a viral inhibitor of the ICE-like cysteine proteases involved in apoptosis, and a dominant negative mutant of the protein FADD. Expression ofwildtype FADD can be used to induce apoptosis.
Polynucleotides of the present invention may also be used in gene therapy applications to enhance or silence CD95 expression. A minigene comprising minimal regulatory sequences which may include, for example, nucleotide positions -1032 to -1 in the hCD95 promoter (which are required for native expression) fused to CD95 cDNA, is useful for enhancing CD95 transcription and expression through gene therapy. Such a minigene may be introduced, for example, in reconstitution 20 and gain-of-function gene therapy in CD95-deficient autoimmune patients. To reconstitute regulated expression of wildtype CD95 in the appropriate cell types of autoimmune patients with a CD95 mutation or expression defect, crude bone marrow cells (or a cell fraction enriched for lymphocytes) from a patient or a compatible donor could be transfected with a CD95 minigene, cloned in viral or 25 non-viral vectors, and these cells reinjected into the patient after destruction of the patient's remaining, untransfected bone marrow cells by radio and-or chemotherapy.
Other suitable gene and/or cell therapy approaches are known in the art.
Polynucleotides containing all or a portion of the enhancer or silencer regulatory sequences disclosed herein may also have therapeutic applications as competitors with endogenous binding proteins or transcription factors for regulatory binding sites on the CD95 gene. Suitable delivery techniques are known in the art.
expression may be modulated in vitro or in vivo using this technique.
Similarly, transcription factors may be employed using competitive or antisense strategies to modulate CD95 expression. Degradation-stabilized phosphorthiodate oligonucleotides, containing silencer and/or enhancer sequences, could be encapsulated into liposomes and delivered to patients by injection intravenously or directly into a target site. Alternatively, retroviral or adenoviral vectors, or naked DNA expressing anti-sense RNA for enhancer and/or silencer transcription factors, could be delivered into patient's cells in vitro or directly into patients in vivo by appropriate routes. Suitable techniques are known in the art.
The word "polynucleotide(s)," as used herein, means a polymeric collection of nucleotides and includes DNA and RNA molecules, both sense and anti-sense strands, and comprehends cDNA, genomic DNA, and wholly or partially synthesized polynucleotides. It will be recognized that operable anti-sense polynucleotides may comprise a fragment of the full-length sequence, and the definition of "polynucleotide" therefore includes all such operable anti-sense fragments. Identification of human genomic DNA and heterologous species DNAs can be accomplished by standard DNA/DNA hybridization techniques, under appropriately stringent conditions, using all or part of a cDNA sequence as a probe to screen an appropriate library. Alternatively, PCR techniques using i oligonucleotide primers that are designed based on known genomic DNA, cDNA 20 and protein sequences can be used to amplify and identify genomic and cDNA sequences. Synthetic DNAs corresponding to the identified sequences and variants may be produced by conventional synthesis methods. All of the polynucleotides described herein are isolated and purified.
The word "variant(s)," as used herein in connection with polynucleotides, 25 comprehends polynucleotides having nucleotide sequences different from the specifically identified sequences, wherein one or more of the nucleotides is deleted o. or substituted, or one or more nucleotides are added, without appreciable loss of the o* regulatory activity of the identified sequence(s). Polynucleotide variants may be naturally occurring allelic variants, or non-naturally occurring variants. Variant polynucleotides preferably exhibit at least 50%, more preferably at least 70% and most preferably at least 90% identity to the identified regulatory sequences and cDNA sequences. Variant polynucleotides more preferably exhibit at least 70% and most preferably at least 90% identity to any 8 nucleotide contiguous portion of an identified regulatory sequence and any 50 nucleotide contiguous portion of an identified cDNA sequence. More preferably yet, variant polynucleotides differ from an identified regulatory or cDNA sequence by substitution, deletion or addition of five nucleotides or fewer. The identity of polynucleotides may be determined by comparing sequences using, for example, algorithms from the FASTA or BLAST search programs (GCG software package, University of Wisconsin) for cDNA comparisons and programs such as TFSEARCH (Yutaka Akiyama, Kyoto University), to search the Transfac database (GBF, Braunschweig, Germany) or search algorithms used in the TESS database, to compare regulatory sequences.
The word "polypeptide," as used herein, encompasses amino' acid chains of any length, including the full length proteins, wherein amino acid residues are linked by covalent peptide bonds. Polypeptides of the present invention may be naturally purified products, or maybe produced partially or wholly using recombinant techniques. Such polypeptides may be glycosylated with mammalian or other eukaryotic carbohydrates or may be non-glycosylated.
Regulatory polynucleotides and transcription factors are described herein Ioo with reference to activities involving "enhancing" or "silencing" transcription of coding portions of the CD95 gene or another gene appropriately linked to a 20 regulatory polynucleotide sequence and a suitable promoter. Such regulatory activities are observed and may be assessed both in vitro and in vivo. It will be recognized that organisms and cells of different types, as well as cells in different ~developmental stages and physiological or in vitro conditions, may exhibit substantially different transcriptional activities. Regulatory polynucleotides 25 described herein as having "enhancing" or "silencing" activities are described with reference to transcription of a CD95 gene having a CD95 basal promoter (-421/-1-CAT) or an HSV tk promoter. Transcriptional activity is considered to be "enhanced" or "silenced" when there is at least a 50%, and more preferably at least a 100%, change in the level of transcriptional activity in the presence of a regulatory polynucleotide compared to the transcriptional activity measured under substantially the same conditions in the presence of the CD95 basal promoter or the HSV tk promoter. Similarly, transcriptional activity is considered to be "enhanced" or silenced" when there is at least a 50%, and more preferably at least a 100%, change in the level of transcriptional activity in the presence of a transcription factor or polynucleotide/transcription factor complex compared to the transcriptional activity measured under substantially the same conditions in the absence of a transcription factor or polynucleotide/transcription factor.
Polypeptide transcription factors are described herein with reference to approximate molecular weights. "Approximate" molecular weights contemplate variances of up to 5% of stated molecular weights up to 50 kDa; variances of up to of stated molecular weights from 51 kDa 100 kDa; and variances of up to 25% of stated molecular weights from 101 300 kDa. Binding of polypeptide transcription factors to polynucleotides and formation of DNA/polypeptide complexes may be assessed in vitro using standard EMSA techniques described below, or in vivo by measuring enhancement or silencing of transcription from the gene or another gene appropriately linked to a regulatory polynucleotide and a suitable promoter.
The words "isolated" and "purified," and other terms used herein, are used in accordance with their art-recognized meanings.
Brief Description of the Drawings 20 Preferred embodiments of the applicants' invention will be described with reference to the drawings, in which: Fig. 1 shows results of the functional analysis of the hCD95 gene region by transient transfection of CAT reporter constructs. The 5'-flanking region of the hCD95 gene is illustrated at the top, with restriction sites relevant for subcloning identified using the following abbreviations: H, Hind III; P, Pst I; and S, Sac II. Individual reporter constructs are illustrated, with construct names referring i to nucleotide positions of the subcloned regions of the hCD95 gene. The results of transient transfections into HeLa and COS-7 cells are illustrated in lanes B and C, .respectively. These results identify regions in the hCD95 gene that enhance (El; 1007 to -964) and silence (Sl; -1035 to -1008) transcription from the promoter.
Fig. 2 illustrates the identification of transcriptional start sites for the gene by primer extension analysis on total RNA from Jurkat cells (lane rat lung cells (lane 2) and rat small intestine cells (lane Numbers at the right refer to nucleotide positions upstream of the translational start site in the hCD95 gene.
Fig. 3 illustrates the results of electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) analysis demonstrating that a hexameric inverted repeat sequence identified in SEQ ID NO: 5 (IR2), present in the hCD95 enhancer region, mediates sequence specific binding of transcription factors in Jurkat cell nuclear extract. Distinct DNA/polypeptide complexes are marked by an arrow and arrowhead. Mutational scanning of the hexameric inverted repeat identified in SEQ ID NO: 5, as shown above the lanes, defined the contributions of individual nucleotide positions to binding and established the degenerate enhancer consensus motif polynucleotide sequence identified in SEQ ID NO: 3.
Fig. 4 illustrates the results of EMSA analysis demonstrating that novel DNA/polypeptide complexes were formed in a sequence-specific manner.
Complexes formed with hCD95 enhancer region motifs spaced by 1 bp and 4 bp are marked by an open arrowhead. This data suggests the existence of a family of related transcription factors which recognize the same binding motif but have different spacing requirements.
20 Fig. 5 illustrates the results of EMSA analysis demonstrating that a novel DNA/polypeptide complex was formed with an hCD95 silencer region probe and an enhancer probe. The experimental work suggested that the polynucleotide heptamer motif identified as SEQ ID NOS: 7 or 36 mediates interaction with transcription factor(s).
Fig. 6 illustrates the results of EMSA analysis demonstrating that singlestranded probes compete for complex-formation and interruption of the heptamer 2. motif identified as SEQ ID NO: 7 or 36 in the silencer region abolishes the ability of the probe to compete with wild-type silencer probe for complex formation. The polynucleotide heptamer motif is thus important for regulatory silencing function.
The SEQ ID NOS for the probe sequences are identified above the lanes.
Fig. 7 illustrates the results of UV-crosslinking analysis. Fig. 7A shows UVcrosslinking using nuclear extracts from murine L929 cells with a double-stranded enhancer region probe (SEQ ID NO: Distinct DNA/polypeptide complexes of approximately 59 and 113 kDA, and a high molecular weight complex of approximately 200-300 kDa are identified. Fig. 7B shows the results of UVcrosslinking using nuclear extracts from Jurkat and L929 cells with a single-stranded hCD95 silencer region probe (SEQ ID NO: 2) to identify DNA/polypeptide complexes of approximately 47, 77 and 100 kDa.
Fig. 8 illustrates the results of Southwestern analysis. Fig. 8A shows the results of Southwestern analysis using nuclear extracts from Jurkat and rat dermal papilla (rDP) cells with a double-stranded hCD95 enhancer region probe (SEQ ID NO: 11). Distinct DNA/polypeptide complexes of approximately 113kDa (in Jurkat and rDP) and approximately 59 kDa (in rDP) were identified. Fig. 8B shows the results of Southwestern analysis using nuclear extracts from Jurkat cells with a single stranded silencer region probe (SEQ ID NO: Distinct DNA/polypeptide complexes of approximately 47 kDa and 100 kDa were identified.
Fig. 9 shows results of the transient transfection of CAT reporter constructs including various hCD95 enhancer and silencer region polynucleotides. Individual reporter constructs, including those referred to as IR2-tk-CAT (SEQ ID NO: 11), mlR2-tk-CAT (SEQ ID NO: 19), IR1-tk-CAT (SEQ ID NO: IR4-tk-CAT (SEQ ID NO: 6) and Sl-tk-CAT (SEQ ID NO: are illustrated, with construct names 20 referring to the hCD95 enhancer and/or silencer region polynucleotides. The results of transient transfections into HeLa and COS-7 cells are illustrated in lanes B and C, respectively. The hCD95 enhancer polynucleotides autonomously enhance transcription from the heterologous tk promoter only in the absence of the silencer region. These results demonstrate the in vivo functionality of the identified enhancer and silencer regions.
Detailed Description of the Invention Genomic clones for the human CD95 (hCD95) gene were isolated and a 2.3 kb region of the hCD95 gene 5'-flanking region was sequenced. The 30 polynucleotide sequence is assigned accession number X87625 in the EMBL database. Initial functional analysis, using CAT reporter constructs and transient transfections, identified transcription silencer activity residing between nucleotide positions -1,781 and -1,007 of the hCD95 gene, and strong transcription enhancer activity residing between nucleotide positions -1,007 and -425 of the human gene. This experimental work is described in F. Rudert et al., "Identification of a Silencer, Enhancer, and Basal Promoter Region in the Human CD95 (Fas/APO-1) Gene," DNA AND CELL BIOLOGY, Vol. 14, No. 11, pp. 931-937, 1995.
Additional functional analysis further delineated the enhancer and silencer regions.
A transcription enhancer region, denominated El (SEQ ID NO: resides between nucleotide positions -1007 and -964 in the hCD95 gene, and a transcription silencer region, denominated SI (SEQ ID NO: resides between nucleotide positions 1035 and -1008 in the hCD95 gene. These regions mediate cell type-specific and activation state-dependent transcriptional regulation of the CD95 gene during activation-induced cell death.
Further experimental work identified a hexameric inverted repeat binding sequence (IR2) (SEQ ID NO: present in the enhancer region that mediates sequence specific binding of nuclear factors present in several mammalian cell lines.
Contributions of the individual nucleotide positions to binding were assessed and a degenerate enhancer consensus motif binding sequence (SEQ ID NO: 3) was identified. Spacing derivatives of the enhancer region (El) consensus motif binding sequence (identified in SEQ ID NOS: 4, 6) also formed novel complexes with 20 mammalian nuclear extracts. This data suggests the existence of a family of related transcriptional factors that recognize the same enhancer motif binding sequence, but have different spacing requirements. Enhancer region (El) binding sequences autonomously enhanced transcription from the heterologous HSV thymidine kinase promoter only in the absence and not in the presence of the silencer region, demonstrating the in vivo functionality of the regulatory sequence motifs. A heptamer motif binding sequence (SEQ ID NOS: 7 and 36), which is present in identical copies in the hCD95 enhancer and silencer regions, that may mediate binding of nuclear factor(s) to the silencer S 1 region, was also identified.
Proteinaceous transcription factors that bind to CD95 regulatory polynucleotides have also been identified. UV cross-linking analysis using an silencer probe (SEQ ID NO: 2) showed cross-linked DNA/polypeptide complexes of approximately 47, and 77 and 100 kDa with both human and rodent nuclear extracts. Results from probing a Southwestern blot of Jurkat cell nuclear extract with a single stranded silencer probe suggested that the 47 and 100 kDa complexes corresponded to single nuclear proteins. Heptamer-containing silencer sequence competitor (SEQ ID NO: 12), complementary to the single stranded silencer probe (SEQ ID NO: but not competitor corresponding to the probe DNA strand (SEQ ID NO: 13) competed for binding of the 47 and 100 kDa species. This correlates with results from EMSA experiments suggesting that the silencer DNA/polypeptide complex is preferably or exclusively formed with single-stranded DNA and that double-strandedness of the DNA at or near the binding region prevents silencer complex formation. The complementary competitor (SEQ ID NO: 12) either contains a silencer binding site (SEQ ID NO: 7) and competes directly with the single-stranded silencer probe (SEQ ID NO: 2) or prevents silencer factor binding by double-strand formation. UV cross-linking analysis using an enhancer probe (SEQ ID NO: 1) and murine cell extract identified cross-linked DNA/polypeptide complexes having molecular weights of about 113 kDa and 59 kDa, and a high molecular weight cross-linked DNA/polypeptide complex of about 200 300 kDa.
The present invention is illustrated by reference to the following experimental protocols and results identifying regulatory polynucleotides and 20 transcription factors. The experimental protocols and results support the specification and claims and should not be construed to limit the invention, as claimed, in any fashion.
S. IDENTIFICATION OF HCD95 REGULATORY POLYNUCLEOTIDES Isolating and Sequencing Genomic Clones for Human Clones (5 xl0 s of a human genomic phage library from placenta were screened with a cDNA probe corresponding to the coding region of hCD95 (EMBL database, accession number x87625). X phages were grown on E. coli Tap90 and replica-plated onto Hybond N' nylon filters (Amersham). After denaturation and fixing of the DNA, filters were hybridized with the random-primed probes in formamide, 1 M NaCI, 1% NaDodSO,, 10x Denhardts, 50mM TrisHCI pH 7.5,2 mM EDTA, 200 ug denatured salmon sperm DNA at 42°C overnight. Filters were washed in 2x SSPE/0.1% NaDodSO, at 65°C. Positive phage clones were isolated after autoradiography and plaque-purified twice using the CD95 probe. A 3.7-kb Hind III fragment from a partial Hind III digest of purified phage DNA was identified by Southern analysis using oligonucleotide FR257 (SEQ ID NO: 8) corresponding to positions -205 to -184 in hCD95 cDNA (Itoh et al., "The Polypeptide Encoded by the cDNA for Human Cell Surface Antigen Fas Can Mediate Apoptosis," Cell 66.233-243, 1991) and was subcloned in pBS SKII (Stratagene) and partially sequenced. The sequence was determined by PCR cycle sequencing using either "P-labeled primers or fluorescent-labeled dideoxynucleotides and a model 373A automated sequencer (AppliedBiosystems).
Cloning of Initial Human CD95 Gene Reporter Constructs A panel of 5' deletions of the 5'-flanking region of the human CD95 gene between positions -1781 and -425 was generated by PCR amplification from the genomic hCD95 clone described above. Several reporter constructs were made by cloning selected segments of the hCD95 gene in front of the chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) gene in the reporter plasmid pBLCAT8' (Klein-Hitpass et al., "A 13 bp Palindrome is a Functional Estrogen Responsive Element and Interacts 20 Specifically with Estrogen Receptor," Nucleic Acids Res. 16, 647-663, 1988). 1781/-67-tk-CAT was constructed by first ligating the 1.7-kb Hind III-Sac II fragment into the Hind III site of Hind III/Bam HI-digested pBLCAT8* and then filling in and ligating the Sac II and Barn HI sites. -1007/-1-tk-CAT and -1007/-1- CAT were generated by inserting a Hind IIUBgI II-digested PCR fragment (Primers FR 283: SEQ ID NO: 9 and FR 290: SEQ ID NO: 10) into Hind III/Bam HI- and Hind III/Bg/ II-digested pBLCAT8, respectively. -1781/-1-CAT was constructed by cloning the 425-bp Pst I-Bgl II fragment from -1007/-1-CAT into Pst IBg/ II digested -1781/-67-tk-CAT. -1781/-67-CAT was constructed by cutting -1781/-67- .tk-CAT with Pst I/Bgl II, filling in the ends, and religating the vector. -425/-1-CAT was derived from -1007/-1-CAT by digestion with Hind IIIIPst I, filling in the ends, and religation of the remaining vector. The PCR conditions were: 50 pmoles of each primer, 200 pM dNTPs each, 2mM MgCl2, 10mM TrisHCI pH 8.3, 50 mM KCI, and 2.5 units of Taq polymerase (Boehringer). Amplification was done for 1 min at 94°C, 1 min at 55 0 C, and 1.5 min at 72 0 C for 30 cycles.
Clonine of Additional Human CD95 Gene Reporter Constructs An additional panel of 5' .deletions of the 5'-flanking region of the human gene between positions -1781 to -425 was generated by PCR amplification from the genomic hCD95 clone described above and cloned in front of the CAT gene in the reporter plasmid pBLCAT8' which lacked the HSV thymidine kinase (tk) promoter. The following CAT reporter constructs were cloned: -1781/-1-CAT; -1687/-1-CAT; -1513/-1-CAT; -1340/-1-CAT; -1299/-1-CAT; -1261/-1-CAT; 1219/-1-CAT; -1175/-1-CAT; -1115/-1-CAT; -1071/-1-CAT; -1035/-1-CAT; 1007/-1-CAT; -963/-1-CAT; -924/-1-CAT; -874/-1-CAT; -802/-1-CAT; -606/-1- CAT; and -425/-1-CAT.
Deletion constructs were generated by PCR amplification using the fixed downstream primer identified in SEQ ID NO: 9 with an attached Bgl II-site and the following respective upstream primers: -1687/-1-CAT SEQ IDNO: -1513/-1-CAT SEQ ID NO: 21 -1340/-1-CAT SEQ ID NO: 22 -1299/-1-CAT SEQ ID NO: 23 -1261/-1-CAT SEQ IDNO: 24 -1219/-1-CAT SEQ ID NO: -1175/- -CAT SEQ ID NO: 26 -1115/-1-CAT SEQ ID NO: 27 -1071/-1-CAT SEQ ID NO: 28 -1035/-I-CAT SEQ ID NO: 29 -963/-1-CAT SEQ ID NO: -924/-1-CAT SEQ ID NO: 31 -874/-1-CAT SEQ ID NO: 32 -802/-1-CAT SEQ IDNO: 33 -606/-1-CAT SEQ ID NO: 34 containing a Hind Ill-site. Hind III/Bg/ II-digested PCR fragments were gel-purified and cloned into the corresponding sites of pBLCAT8+. Construction of -1781/-1- CAT, -1007/-I-CAT and -425/-1-CAT reporter constructs is described above. The additional constructs were generated by ligating double-stranded oligonucleotides .9 having SEQ ID NOS: 4, 6, 11, 19 or the same sequences with a 5' extension corresponding to SEQ ID NO: 2, most of these oligonucleotides also containing a Hind III-compatible 5' overhang, into Hind III-digested pBLCAT8+. All constructs were confirmed by sequencing using an automated sequencer (Applied Biosystems).
Transient Transfection of CAT Reporter Constructs COS-7 (Cynomologous monkey kidney) and HeLa (human cervix carcinoma) cells were cultured in standard Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) supplemented with 5% fetal calf serum, penicillin, streptomycin, glutamine, and B-mercaptoethanol 5 x 10 5 cells were seeded in plastic culture dishes (Falcon) 24 hr prior to transfection. Cells were transfected by the CaPO, method with 5 ug of initial and additional reporter plasmids described above, 1.5 ug of B-galatosidase (8-Gal) expression vector pCHI10 (Pharmacia) as internal control, and 8 ug of pBS (Stratagene) as carrier DNA. At 18 hr after transfection, cells were washed once with DMEM, fresh growth medium was added, and the cells incubated for another 24 hr. Thereafter, cells were harvested in TrisHCI pH 7.5, ImMEDTA, 150 mMNaCL; spun down; resuspended in 250 mM TrisHCI pH 7.5, ImM EDTA, 15% glycerol; and extracts prepared by repeated freeze-thaw cycles. Chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) assays, normalized 20 for B-Gal expression, were done as described in Zelent et al., "Cloning and Murine a and 3 Retinoic Acid Receptors and Novel Receptor y Predominantly Expressed in Skin," Nature 339:715-717, 1989 using 0.5 mM acetylCoA (Boehringer) and 0.2 pCi ["C]chloramphenicol (sp. act. 54 mCi/mmole, Amersham). The reaction products were separated by thin-layer chromatography in CHCl 3 /methanol (95:5).
Functional Analysis of CD95 Gene Sequences The CAT reporter constructs described above were used to functionally analyze the hCD95 gene 5'-flanking region in transient transfection assays. The percentage CAT conversion and average fold stimulation, compared to pBLCAT8' lacking the tk promoter (set as are shown below for transfections of the initial reporter constructs into COS-7 and HeLa cells.
Construct tk-CAT -1781/-67-tk-CAT -1007/-I-tk-CAT
CAT
-1781/-I-CAT -1781/-67-CAT -1007/- 1-CAT -425/-1-CAT Table 1 COS-7 CAT Fold Conversion Stimulation 2.5 1 6 1.8 ±0.7 5 12.3 5.2 31 0.4 0.1 1 0.6 0.2 2 0.8 ±0.4 2 7.6 4.1 19 3.2 0.4 8 HeLa CAT Fold Conversion Stimulation 4.9±4.9 5.2 ±4.6 11 50.7 ±24.7 102 0.5 0.4 1 2.1 0.6 4 4.4 1.9 9 29.7± 19.0 6.6 0.6 13
L
.9 9 9** 9 *9*9 *e*9 *9*9 *9*9 9 9** *99* 9 *9*9 9 *99* 9 9 The largest construct tested (-1781/-1-CAT) showed only very weak activity in COS-7 and HeLa cells. The same construct, with a 67-bp deletion at its 3' end (-1781/-67-CAT) gave practically the same response as -1781/-i-CAT in COS-7 cells and an approximately two-fold increase in HeLa cells. When tested together with the heterologous HSV tk promoter, the same.fragment (-1781/-67-tk-CAT) showed no additional transcriptional activity compared to that observed with the tk promoter alone in both COS-7 and HeLa cells. However, a truncation of 764 bp 10 (-1007/-I-CAT) at the 5' end of -1781/-1-CAT increased transcriptional activity 19-fold and 60-fold above background levels in COS-7 and HeLa cells, respectively.
A similar upregulation was seen with a tk promoter-containing, identical construct (-1007/-1-tk-CAT) in both cell lines. These data indicated that a silencer is located between positions -1,781 and -1,007 in the human CD95 gene 5'-flanking region. A 15 further truncation of 582 bp at the 5' end of reporter -1007/-1-CAT drastically attenuated the strong activity seen with the construct, but -425/-1-CAT retained a basal promoter activity above that observed with -1781/-I-CAT and -1781/-67-CAT.
These results demonstrate the presence of an enhancer between -1,007 and -425 in the hCD95 gene 5'-flanking region and revealed a basal promoter activity in the first 20 425 bp of the hCD95 regulatory region. Basal promoter activity reached a level comparable to that of the tk promoter. Thus, the hCD95 promoter was regarded as relatively strong.
Functional analysis of the hCD95 gene 5'-flanking region by transient transfection of the additional CAT reporter constructs is illustrated in Fig. 1.
Individual reporter constructs are illustrated, with construct names referring to nucleotide positions of the subcloned regions of the hCD95 gene. The results of transient transfections into the HeLa and COS-7 cells are illustrated in lanes B and C, respectively. The thin layer chromatograms show the amount of acetylated '"C-chloramphenicol substrate as generated by the level of CAT enzyme expressed from the respective reporter constructs, where spot intensity correlates with the level of transcriptional activation. These data further delineate regions in the hCD95 gene which enhance (El; -1007 to -964) or silence (SI; -1035 to -1008) transcription from the CD95 promoter. The results from transfection analysis indicate that the silencer represses transcription to levels of about 3-fold less than seen with the basal promoter (-425/-1-CAT), which has a transcriptional activity similar to that of the HSV tk promoter. The CD95 enhancer increases transcription from the CD95 basal promoter about 2- to 4-fold and from the HSV tk promoter about 5 to fold, depending on the cell type.
Delineation of additional regulatory polynucleotides is described below in connection with the identification of transcription factors.
S* DETERMINATION OF HCD95 TRANSCRIPTIONAL START SITES Primer Extension Analysis Total RNA from Jurkat cells, rat lung cells and rat small intestine cells was extracted according to Chomczynski and Sacchi, "Single Step Method of RNA Isolation by Acid Guanidinium Thiocyanate-Phenol-Chloroform Extraction," Anal.
Bio-Chem, 162:156-159, 1987. All subsequent steps were performed using diethylpyrocarbonate-treated
H
2 0. For primer annealing, 10 pg total RNA together with 5 pmole y- 32 P-labeled primer FR257 (SEQ ID NO: 8, 3 x 10' cpm) were incubated for 5 min. at 65°C in hybridization buffer (150 mM KCI, 10 mM TrisHCI pH 8.3, 1 mM EDTA) in a total volume of 15 pl and the mixture then slowly cooled to room temperature for 1.5h. To this, 30 pl of primer extension buffer [30 mM TrisHCI pH 8.3, 15 mM MgCl,, 8 mM DTT, 0.22 mg/ml actinomycin D, 220 pM dNTPs, 200 units MMLV reverse transcriptase (BRL)] were added and reverse transcription was carried out at 42 0 C for 1 h. Then, 105 pl of RNAse digestion buffer [20 pg/ml DNase-free RNaseA (BRL), 100 ug/ml sonicated salmon sperm DNA (Sigma), 100 mM NaC 1, 10 mM TrisHCl pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA] were added, followed by digestion at 37°C for 15 min. 15 pl of 3 M sodium acetate were added, the sample extracted with phenol/CHClI and the DNA was precipitated with ethanol.
The extension products were resuspended in formamide loading buffer, heatdenatured and separated on a 6% sequencing gel.
Identification of Transcriptional Start Sites In Jurkat cells, multiple putative transcriptional start sites were identified clustered from -54 to -128 (Fig. 2A,B lane 1) on the hCD95 gene. These matched most of the transcriptional start sites that have been detected in human spleen (Behrmann et al., "Structure of the Human APO-I Gene," Eur. J. Immunol. 24:3057- 3062, 1994) using 5' RACE PCR. Virtually the same extension products were obtained with RNA extracted from rat lung (Fig. 2 A,B, lane showing that primer FR257 (SEQ ID NO. which spans the ATG in hCD95, could hybridize to rat CD95 mRNA and suggesting that certain start sites are conserved in human and rat CD95 genes. When RNA from rat small intestine was used, additional extension 20 products, not seen in Jurkat cells or rat lung, were obtained (Fig. 2A,B lane 3).
Some of these new, putative start sites lie in very close proximity to hCD95 gene Sstart sites identified in the human T-cell lines CEM-6 and Molt-4 (Cheng et al., "Characterization of the Human Fas Gene," J. Immunol 154:1239-1245, 1995) also using primer extension analysis.
IDENTIFICATION OF TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS WHICH BIND TO REGULATORY HCD95 POLYNUCLEOTIDES Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay (EMSA) Protocol 30 Nuclear extracts were prepared from Jurkat (human T lymphoma cells) and MP-1 (human EBV-transformed B cells) grown under 5% CO, in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with antibiotics and 5% fetal bovine serum, and from HeLa, COS-7, CV-1 (COS-7 derivative) and L929 (murine fibroblast cells) grown under CO, in DMEM medium supplemented with antibiotics and 5% fetal bovine serum according to the method of Andrews and Faller, "A Rapid Micropreparation Technique for Extraction of DNA-Binding Proteins from Limiting Numbers of Mammalian Cells," Nucleic Acids Research, Vol. 19, No. 9, 1991. If not indicated otherwise, binding reactions contained 5 pg nuclear extract (adjusted to give an equal contribution of 40mM NaCI in the binding reaction), 150 mM (or 100 mM) KCI, 2 pg of non-specific competitor DNA (poly[d(l-C)] or poly[d(A-T)], as indicated), 12% glycerol, 12 mM Hepes pH 7.9, 4 mM Tris-HCI pH 7.9, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 20 fmole of [y- 3 P]ATP-labeled probe (double- or single-stranded, as indicated). The indicated amounts of competitor oligonucleotides were added before addition of the nuclear extract and the reaction incubated for 30 min. at room temperature. Three pl loading buffer (12% glycerol, 12mM Hepes pH 7.9, 4 mM Tris-HCI pH 7.9, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.1 bromophenol blue) were added, the reactions loaded on pre-run (2 h at 150 V) non-denaturing 4% polyacrylamide gels (acrylamide:bisacrylamide, 30:1). The gels were run in 50 mM Tris-HCI (pH 380 mM glycine, 2 mM EDTA at 150 V (constant voltage) with water-cooling. Gels were dried and autoradiographed for 1 to 4 days. This assay, and variants of this assay are referred to herein as the "standard EMSA assay protocol." Identification of Transcription Factors Which Bind to hCD95 Enhancer Region EMSA analysis using an El double-stranded probe (El probe, SEQ ID NO: 11) and Jurkat cell nuclear extract revealed that a hexameric inverted repeat nucleotide, identified in SEQ ID NO: 5 and present in El, mediates sequencespecific binding of nuclear factors. Experimental results are shown in Fig. 3.
Distinct DNA/polypeptide complexes formed with these nuclear factors, referred to herein as transcription factors, are marked by an arrow and an arrowhead.
STranscription factors that bind to the enhancer region hexameric inverted repeat (IR2) identified as SEQ ID NO: 5 are also present in murine L929 cells and other primate and rodent cells, including HeLa, MP-1, COS-7, and rat dermal papilla (rDP) cells.
Mutational scanning of the enhancer region hexameric inverted repeat identified as SEQ ID NO: 5, using a 50-fold molar excess of double stranded competitor oligonucleotides containing the single nucleotide substitutions indicated above the respective lanes (derivatives of SEQ ID NO: 11) in EMSA analysis together with the wildtype enhancer probe (SEQ ID NO: 1, See Fig. 3) has identified the importance of individual nucleotides for binding and defined the degenerate El consensus motif identified in SEQ ID NO: 3 as an hCD95 enhancer region (El) binding site.
Using nuclear extracts from murine L929 cells in EMSA analysis, sequencespecific formation of novel DNA/polypeptide complexes, which were different from enhancer region binding site IR2 complexes, was demonstrated with enhancer region sequence motifs spaced by 1 bp (IRI; SEQ ID NO: 4) and 4 bp (IR4; SEQ ID NO: Experimental results are shown in Fig. 4. Complexes formed by the nuclear transcription factors that bind to hexameric inverted repeat (SEQ ID NO: containing enhancer probe (IR2, SEQ ID NO: 11), are marked by an arrow and arrowhead. The open arrowhead indicates the presence of complexes formed by the enhancer region spacing derivatives (IRI; SEQ ID NO: 4 and IR4; SEQ ID NO: 6).
The enhancer region IR1, IR2 and IR4 elements cross-competed for the formation of the respective DNA/polypeptide complexes in a sequence-specific manner. These results suggest the existence of a family of related transcription factors which recognize the same CD95 enhancer region binding motif but have different spacing requirements.
Concatamerized enhancer (SEQ ID NO: 11) sequences were used as probes to screen cDNA expression libraries according to methods published in Singh et al., (1989) Molecular Cloning of Sequence-Specific DNA Binding Proteins Using Recognition Site Probes, BioTechniques, 7 pp 252-261. Using a single-stranded 3x El (3x SEQ ID NO: 11) probe to screen a HeLa expression library, clones encoding the following DNA-binding proteins were isolated: human YB-1 (EMBL :Accession No. M24070; SWISS-PROT Accession No. P16990); and human hnRNP D (EMBL Accession No. D55672; SWISS-PROT Accession Nos. Q14101 and Q14103).
Identification of Transcription Factors which Binds to the hCD95 Silencer Region Novel DNA/polypeptide complexes were formed using a silencer region probe (SEQ ID NO: and an enhancer region IR2 probe (SEQ ID NO: 11) when using polydAdT instead of polydldC as non-specific competitor DNA in EMSA analysis. Results are shown in Fig. 5, with the silencer probe identification shown above the lanes and the double arrowhead indicating the novel complex. This factor(s) also bound to single-stranded silencer probes or was competed out by single-stranded silencer and enhancer probes.
Further EMSA analysis is illustrated in Fig. 6, using silencer probes having SEQ ID NOS: 2 and 14-18. The silencer region heptamer motif (SEQ ID NO: 7 or 36), which is present in identical copies in the S1 and El regions, appeared to mediate interaction with the transcription factor(s), since the respective DNA/polypeptide complex was also formed with a single-stranded silencer region probe (SEQ ID NO: 12) including the silencer region heptamer sequence, but not with the complement of this probe (SEQ ID NO: 13). Silencer region probes from both DNA strands, having an interruption of the heptamer motif in the silencer region and containing less than a full heptamer motif, identified in SEQ ID NOS: 15-18, showed greatly reduced ability to compete for complex formation with the wildtype S1 probe.
20 Concatamerized silencer (SEQ ID NO: 2) sequences were used as probes to screen cDNA expression libraries according to methods published in Singh et al., (1989) Molecular Cloning of Sequence-Specific DNA Binding Proteins Using Recognition Site Probes, BioTechniques, 7 pp 252-261. Using a single-stranded S- 3XS1 (3x SEQ ID NO: 2) probe to screen HeLa and rat Dermal Papilla expression libraries, clones encoding the following DNA-binding proteins were isolated: human YB-1 (EMBL Accession No. M24070; SWISS-PROT Accession No.
P16990); rat YB-I (EMBL Accession No. M57299; SWISS-PROT Accession No.
P22568); rat Purac (SEQ ID NOS: 38, 39, 41 and 42); and a novel rat Pura-like protein (SEQ ID NOS: 40 and 43).
To confirm that YB-1 is a component of the CD95 Silencer complex, a YB-1 antibody was incubated with nuclear extracts and the silencer regulatory sequence (SEQ ID NO: 2) probe using supershift procedures documented in Macdonald et al.
(1995), The transcriptional regulatory protein, YB-1, promotes single-stranded regions in the DRA promoter, J. Biol. Chem., 270 3527-3533. Incubation with the antibody caused a supershift, indicating that YB-1 is a component of the silencer complex.
Characterization of Transcription Factors for Silencer/Enhancer Reions by UVcrosslinking UV-crosslinking was performed essentially as described by Miyamoto et al., Methods Enzymol. 254, 633-641, 1995. Oligonucleotides of 44 and 28 bases in length were end-labeled as in the above-described EMSA reactions. Doublestranded DNA probes were prepared by annealing the end-labeled oligonucleotides and filling in with [y- 3 P]dATP, [y-"P]dCTP, [y-"P]dGTP (800Ci/nimol) and 5-bromo-2'-dUTP using Klenow (Miyamoto et al., 1995.) A standard EMSA binding reaction was set up with 40fmol probe and nuclear extracts 4pmol competitor DNA in a total volume of 40ml in a flatbottomed microtitre plate. The plate was covered with Saran-wrap and placed on ice. The reactions were irradiated for 60 minutes by inverting a UV transilluminator of 305nm wavelength, such that the illuminator was within 5cm from the microtitre plate. The reactions were then divided into two. One aliquot was run on a 4% non- 20 denaturing gel as described previously, and the second aliquot was run on a reducing SDS-PAGE gel with 4 C-labeled protein markers. The gels were dried followed by autoradiography with an intensifying screen for 1-3 days.
UV-crosslinking analysis results shown in Fig. 7B using an end-labeled, single-stranded S1 probe (SEQ ID NO: revealed cross-linked DNA/polypeptide complexes of approximately 47, 77 and 100 kDa in Jurkat and L929 cells. Results from probing a Southwestern blot of Jurkat cell nuclear extract with the singlestranded S1 probe (SEQ ID NO: 2) suggested that the 47 kDa and 100 kDa complexes corresponded to single nuclear proteins. UV-crosslinking with a doublestranded El probe (SEQ ID NO: shown in Fig. 7A, revealed cross-linked DNA/polypeptide complexes of approximately 59 kDa, 113 kDa, and a high molecular weight complex of approximately 200 to 300 kDa in L929 cells.
Characterization of Transcription Factors for Silencer/Enhancer Regions by Southwestern Analysis 20-40pgs of nuclear extracts from Jurkat, L929 and rat dermal papilla (rDP) cells, prepared as described above, were electrophoresed on a 8110% reducing SDS- 8 PAGE gel with "C-labeled protein markers. The gel was pre-soaked in Transfer Buffer prior to electroblotting to 0.2mm nitrocellulose filters as described by Li, M.
and Desiderio, Appendix 1, "Transcription Factors: A Practical Approach" (D.S.
Latchman. Ed.) IRL Press, Oxford, pp. 187-196, 1993. Nitrocellulose filters were blocked in 2.5% dried milk powder, 25mM Hepes (pH ImM DTT, glycerol, 50mM NaC1, ImM EDTA at 4°C for 18 hours: Filters were hybridised in SW-Binding Buffer (12% glycerol, 12mM ,epes (pH 8), 4mM Tris-HCI (pH ImM EDTA, ImM DTT, 40mM NaCI, 100mM KCI), Ipmol/ml "P-labeled DNA probe (end labeled or filled in, as above), lOpg/ml nonspecific competitor DNA poly[di-dC] or poly[dA-dT]) and 100 pmol/ml competitor DNA for 60 minutes at room temperature. The filters were washed for 4 x 7 minutes in SW-Binding Buffer at 4C prior to autoradiography for 3 days with an intensifying screen.
o Southwestern analysis results of Jurkat and rDP nuclear extracts using a double stranded enhancer probe (SEQ ID NO: 11) are illustrated in Fig 8A. These 20 results show protein species having molecular weights of approximately 59 kDa (rDP) and 113 kDa (Jurkat and rDP) to which a double-stranded enhancer probe binds. Southwestern analysis results of Jurkat nuclear extracts using a single stranded silencer probe (SEQ ID NO: 2) are illustrated in Fig. 8B. These results show protein species having molecular weights of approximately 47 kDa and 100 kDa to which a single-stranded silencer probe binds. Binding of the silencer probe to these proteins is greatly reduced or absent in the presence of a heptamer (SEQ ID NO: 7) containing competitor (SEQ ID NO: 12), complementary to the probe strand, but not an equivalent competitor (SEQ ID NO: 13) corresponding to the probe strand. These Southwestern results are consistent with UV-crosslinking and EMSA results obtained with the probes and competitors described above.
Functional Analysis of Transcription Factors The CD95 silencer (SEQ ID NO: enhancer (SEQ ID NO: 11) and promoter fragment (SEQ ID NO: 27) were cloned in front of the HSV tk promoter and CAT gene in the reporter plasmid pBLCAT8'. Constructs encoding YB-1, Purer, Pura-like and hnRNP D proteins were cloned into the vector pCDNA3. The constructs were overexpressed in HeLa cells with both of the CD95 promoter-CAT reporter constructs. The overexpression of sense YB-1 repressed transcription of the promoter 7-fold and expression of antisense YB-I stimulated transcription of the CD-95 promoter 2-fold. The overexpression of sense Pura repressed transcription of the CD95 promoter 4-fold and expression of antisense Pura stimulated the transcription of the CD95 promoter 1.5-fold. This suggests that both YB-1 and Pura play a role in repression of the CD95 promoter in vivo.
A construct encoding hnRNP D protein was also cloned into the vector pCDNA3. This construct was overexpressed in HeLa cells with the CD95 promoter- CAT reporter constructs described above.
EMSA Analysis of Silencer/DNA and Enhancer/DNA Complexes EMSA gel mobility shift assays using the protocol described above determined several characteristics of the silencer/DNA (SEQ ID NO: 2) and 20 enhancer/DNA (SEQ ID NO: 11) complexes. The half-life of both silencer/DNA and enhancer/DNA complexes is approximately one hour. The enhancer/DNA complex was only stable in less than 300mM KCI, and formation of the enhancer/DNA complex required the presence of divalent cations. Thirty percent of.the silencer/DNA complex was stable in 2M KC1. The formation of the silencer/DNA complex did not require the presence of divalent cations, and the silencer/DNA complex contains an ATP-dependent protein.
These experimental results demonstrate that the silencer/DNA complex is very stable, and the enhancer/DNA complex is much less stable. This is consistent S* with the anticipated in vivo activity i.e. the silencer/DNA complex is formed most of the time, and expression of CD95 is suppressed. The ATP-dependence suggests that ATP is utilized to unwind the CD95 silencer regulatory region to provide the single stranded conformation that the transcription factors bind.
DEMONSTRATION OF PROMOTER CONTEXT-INDEPENDENT
FUNCTION
OF HCD95 SILENCER AND ENHANCER REGIONS enhancer binding site sequences IR1 (SEQ ID NO: IR2 (SEQ ID NO: 11), mutated IR2 (SEQ ID NO: 19), and IR4 (SEQ ID NO: 6) were cloned, with and without an upstream silencer region (SEQ ID NO: in front of the HSV tk promoter and CAT gene in reporter plasmid pBLCAT8+. The Sl/mIR2-tk-CAT construct had an additional base in the mIR2 region and is set forth in SEQ ID NO: 35. The reporter constructs and results of transient transfection assays of these CAT reporter constructs into HeLa and COS-7 cells are shown in Fig. 9.
The experimental results show that enhancer region elements in IRi',,IR2 and IR4 autonomously enhanced transcription, to various extents, from the heterologous promoter only in the absence, and not in the presence, of silencer region polynucleotides. This demonstrates the in vivo functionality of the identified silencer and enhancer polynucleotide sequences.
All references and other materials cited herein are incorporated by reference in their entirety. While in the foregoing specification this invention has been described in relation to certain preferred embodiments thereof, and many details have been set forth for purposes of illustration, it will be apparent to those skilled in 20 the art that the invention is susceptible to additional embodiments and that certain of the details described herein may be varied considerably without departing from the basic principles of the invention.
Page(s)L7- 14-9 are claims pages they appear after the sequence listing SEQUENCE LISTING GENERAL INFORMATION
APPLICANT:
(ii) TITLE OF THE INVENTION: CD95 REGULATORY GENE SEQUENCES AND TRANSCRIPTION
FACTORS
(iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 43 (iv) CORRESPONDENCE
ADDRESS:
ADDRESSEE: Russell McVeagh West-Walker STREET: The Todd Building, Cnr Brandon Street Lambton Quay CITY: Wellington
STATE:
COUNTRY: New Zealand COMPUTER READABLE FORM: MEDIUM TYPE: Diskette COMPUTER: IBM Compatible OPERATING SYSTEM: DOS SOFTWARE: Wordperfect 5.2 (vi) CURRENT APPLICATION
DATA:
APPLICATION
NUMBER:
FILING DATE:
CLASSIFICATION:
(vii) PRIOR APPLICATION DATA: APPLICATION NUMBER: FILING DATE: (viii) ATTORNEY/AGENT
INFORMATION:
NAME: Bennett, Michael Roy REGISTRATION
NUMBER:
REFERENCE/DOCKET NUMBER: 22314\MRB (ix) TELECOMMUNICATION INFORMATION: TELEPHONE: +64 4 499 9058 TELEFAX: +64 4 499 9306 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:1: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 44 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear S"(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:1: AGTAATGATG TCATTATCCA AACATACCTT CTGTAAAATT CATG 44 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:2: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 28 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:2: GTCTGGAACT GCATCCAAAT TCAGGTTC 28 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:3: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 13 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:3: KMMTGAKGTM AKM 13 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:4: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 21 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:4: AGTAATGAT TCATTATCCA AA 21 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 14 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID TAATGATGTC ATTA a a 9* a a.
a a.
a.
INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:6: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 24 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:6: AGTAATGAT GTGTCATTAT CCAAA 24 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:7: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 7 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:7:
TTTGGAT
7 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:8: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 21 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:8: TGCCCAGCAT GGTTGTTGAG C 21 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:9: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 26 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:9: CAAGATCTGG TTGTTGAGCA ATCCTC 26 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 29 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID 37 *r r GCGAAGCTTA GTAAATGATG
TCATTATCC
29 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:11: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 22 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:11: AGTAATGAT GTCATTATCC AAA 22 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:12: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 14 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:12: GAATTTGGAT GCAG 14 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:13: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 14 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:13: CTGCATCCAA ATTC 14 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:14: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 28 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:14: GAACCTGAAT TTGGATGCAG TTCCAGAC 28 o o INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: 38 LENGTH: 14 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID GTCTGGAACT GCAT 14 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:16: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 14 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:16: ATGCAGTTCC AGAC 14 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:17: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 14 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:17: CCAAATTCAG GTTC 14 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:18: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: o LENGTH: 14 base pairs S* TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear S(ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other S(xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:18: GAACCTGAAT TTGG 14 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:19: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 21 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:19: AGTATGATGG CATTATCCAA A 21 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 20 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID CACATATGTG AGTTGCTGGC INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:21: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 27 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:21: GCGAAGCTTC TTTTCATTTT GGAATAG 27 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:22: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 28 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:22: GCGAAGCTTA GGTGGAACAG AGACAAGC 28 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:23: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 25 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:23: GCGAAGCTTT GGTAAGTGCA GTGAC
S
S..
S:
I S 5 55! INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:24: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 25 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:24: GCGAAGCTTG AAAGCCCTCA GGAGG INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 25 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID GCGAAGCTTA AACAGGCTCC AGAAG INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:26: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 19 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:26: GATGTACAGT GGGCTAAGC 19 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:27: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 27 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:27: GCGAAGCTTG GAAGGGAGAG AGGTTGC 27 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:28: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 25 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single 41 'I
C
C
C.
C
C
C.
.r
C.
C C
CCAC
CC C
CC
C
TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:28: GCGAAGCTTG ATGCCAAAGG AATAC INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:29: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 25 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:29: GCGAAGCTTG TCTGGAACTG CATCC INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 25 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID GCGAAGCTTC TAAACTACCT AAGAG S* INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:31: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 25 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:31: ~GCGAAGCTTG TGACTTTGAA CAGTG INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:32: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 25 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:32: 42 GCGAAGCTTT TTAAAGAAAA TTGGC INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:33: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 26 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:33: GCGAAGCTTG GGCTATGCGA TTTGGC 26 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:34: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 27 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:34: GCGAAGCTTC TTTCTCTGAG TGACTCC 27 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 50 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: cDNA (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID GTCTGGAACT GCATCCAAAT TCAGGTTCAG TAATGATGGC ATTATCCAAA INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:36: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 7 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:36: @0 I. 0 0 0 '0 0000 0060
S
*00S
S
00 5000 I. 0
S
I @0
ATCCAAA
INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:37: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 16 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:37: AGTAATGATG TCATTA 16 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:38: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 678 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRLANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:38:
GGGCGACTGA
CGAGACAGCG
120
CCGGGCTCGG
180
GGCGGCGGCG
240
CGGGTGGACA
300
TTCCTGAAGA
360
TCTGTGGCCG
420
GGCCCCAGCC
480
AGCGAGTTCC
540
GGCCGCTTCC
600
GGCCAGACCA
660
CTCATCGACG
678 AGCGGCGGGC GGAACGGCAG GCGGCGGCGG ATCGCAGCAT CATGGCGGAC
GCAGCGAGCA
GCTCAGGCTC
GCGGGGCCCC
TCCAGAACAA
TCGCTGAGGT
TGGAGTTCCG
AGCCGCCCGA
TGGTGCGCGA
TGCGCATCCG
TTGCGCTGCC
ACTATGGA
GGGTGGTGCG
CGGCGGGGGC
GGGGGGGCTG
GCGTTTCTAC
GGGCGCTGGC
CGACTACCTG
CCTGGCCCAG
AAACCGCAAG
CCAGACAGTC
CGCACAGGGG
GCGCTGGGCT
GGTGGTGGCG
CAGCACGAGA
*CTGGACGTGA
GGCAACAAGA
GGCGACTTCA
GCACAGGACG
TACTACATGG
AACCGGGGGC
CTCATCGAGT
CGGGCGGCTC
GCGGGGGCGG
CGCAGGAGCT
AGCAGAACGC
GCCGCCTCAC
TCGAGCACTA
AGCCACGCCG
ATCTCAAGGA
CCGGCCTGGG
TCCGTGACGC
CCTAGGGCAC
CGGCGGCAGT
GGCCTCCAAG
TAAGGGCCGT
CCTCTCCATG
CGCGCAGCTG
GGCGCTCAAG
GAACCAGCGC
CTCCACGCAG
TCTGGCCA.AG
INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:39: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 434 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:39: TTCTTCGATG TGGGTTCCAA CAAGTACGGC GTGTTTATGC GAGTCAGTGA GGTGAAGCCC ACCTACCGCA ACTCCATCAC CGTGCCCTAC AAGGTGTGGG CCAAGTTCGG ACACACCTTC 120 44
TGCAAGTACT
IBO
TGTGAGCAGC
240
TTATTGCAGG
300
ACACACACAC
360
ACACACACAG
420 434 CCGAGGAGAT GAAGAAGATT CAAGAGAAGC AGAGGGAGAA GCGGGCCGCC TCCACCAGCA GCAACAGCAG CAGCAAGAGG AGACCACCGC TGCCACCCTG GTGAGGAAGA AGGGGAAGAA GATTGATCAA ACTGAATGAA ACACACACAC ACACACACAC ACACACACAC ACGCATACAC ATACGTGTAC ACACACACAC CCACACACAG AGAAAATATA CTGTAAAGAG AGAAAATAAA AAGTTAAAAA
AAAA
INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 384 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: Other (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID GAATTCGGCA CGAGCTCGTG CCGALATTCGG CACGAGGGGC GCGAGCGCAG CGAGGCGGCG GCCGAGAAGA TGGCGGACGG CGACAGCGGC AGCGAGCGCG 120 CGGCGGGCCC GGCAGCTTCC AGCCCGCGCC CCGCGGCGGC GGAGGGCCTG 180 GGAGACGCAG GAGCTGGCCT CGAAGCGGCT GGACATCCAG AACAAGCGCT 240 CGTGAAGCAG AACGCCAAGG GCCGCTTCCT CAAPATCGCC GAGGTGGGCG 300 CAAGAGCCGC CTCACGCTCT CGATGGCGGT GGCCGCCGAG TTCCGCGACT 360 CTTCATCGAG CACTACGCGC AGCT 384
CGGGCGGCGG
GTGGCGGCGG
GCGGCGAGCA
TCTACCTGGA
CGGGCGGCTC
CGCTGGGCGA
0 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:41: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 209 amino acids TYPE: amino acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear Met Ser Gly Al a Val1 Lys Ser Leu (xi) SEQUENCE Ala Asp Arg Asp 5 Gly Gly Ser Leu 20 Gly Gly Gly Gly 35 Pro Gly Gly Leu Asp Ile Gln Asn Gly Arg Phe Leu Arg Leu Thr Leu 100 Gly Asp Phe Ile DESCRIPTIONW SEQ ID Ser Gly Ser Glu Gln Gly His Pro Gly Ser Gly Gly Gly Gly Gly 40 Gln His Glu Thr Gln 55 Lys Arg Phe Tyr Leu 70 Lys Ile Ala Giu Val Ser Met Ser Val Ala 105 Glu His Tyr Ala Gin NO: 4 1: Gly Gly Ala Gly Ser Gly Ser Gly Gly Glu Leu Ala Asp Val Lys Gly Ala Gly Val Glu Phe Leu Gly Pro Pro Glu 145 Asn Pro Gly Gly Ala Gin Ala Gin 135 Val Arg Glu Asn 150 Gly Arg Phe Leu 165 Gly Ser Thr Gin 180 Glu Phe Arg Asp 120 Asp Glu Arg Lys Arg Ile Gly Gin 185 Ala Leu 200 Pro Arg Tyr Tyr 155 Arg Gin 170 Thr Ile Ala Lys 125 Ala Leu Lys Ser Asp Leu Lys Glu 160 Val Asn Arg Gly 175 Leu Pro Ala Gin 190 Ile Asp Asp Tyr 205 Phe 1 Glu Trp Lys His Leu .i I* INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:42: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 91 amino acids TYPE: amino acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO Phe Asp Val Gly Ser Asn Lys Tyr Gly Va 5 10 Val Lys Pro Thr Tyr Arg Asn Ser Ile Th 25 Ala Lys Phe Gly His Thr Phe Cys Lys Ty 40 Ile Gin Glu Lys Gin Arg Glu Lys Arg Al 55 Gin Gin Gin Gin Gin Gin Gin Glu Glu Th 70 75 Leu Gin Gly Glu Glu Glu Gly Glu Glu As 85 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:43: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 101 amino acids TYPE: amino acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear :42: 1 Phe Met Arg Val Ser r Val Pro Tyr Lys Val r Ser Glu Glu Met Lys a Ala Cys Glu Gin Leu r Thr Ala Ala Thr Leu
P
I.
Met 1 Pro Glu Lys Lys Ser Glu (xi) SEQUENCE Ala Asp Gly Asp 5 Gly Ser Phe Gin 20 Gin Glu Thr Gin Arg Phe Tyr Leu Ile Ala Glu Val Met Ala Val Ala His Tyr Ala Gin 100 DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID Ser Gly Ser Glu Arg Pro Ala Pro Arg Gly Glu Leu Ala Ser Lys Asp Val Lys Gin Asn 55 Gly Ala Gly Gly Ser 70 Ala Glu Phe Arg Asp NO:43: Gly Gly Gly Gly Arg Leu Ala Lys Lys Ser Ser Leu

Claims (17)

1. An isolated polynucleotide selected from the group consisting of: SEQ ID NOS: 1-7, 11, 12, 14, 36 and 37 that, when operably linked to a coding portion of a CD95 gene, is capable of modulating expression of the gene.
2. An isolated polynucleotide having at least 70% identity to a polynucleotide of claim 1, the at least 70% identity measured using the FASTA algorithm set at default parameters, whereby the isolated polynucleotide, when operably inked to a coding portion of a CD95 gene, is capable of modulating expression of the CD95 gene.
3. An isolated polynucleotide of claim 2 which is a genomic DNA molecule.
4. An isolated polynucleotide of claim 2 which is a wholly of partially chemically synthesized polynucleotide.
An isolated antisense polynucleotide corresponding to a polynucleotide of claim 2.
6. An isolated polynucleotide of claim 2 that is capable of binding to a polypeptide transcription factor to form a complex that modulates expression of the CD95 gene.
7. An isolated polynucleotide that differs from one of the polynucleotides set forth as SEQ IN NOS: 1-6, 11, 12, 14, 36 and 37 by substitution, deletion or addition of five nucleotides or fewer. 21/06/01 48
8. An isolated polynucleotide according to claim 2 that is capable of forming a DNA/polypeptide complex with a polypeptide transcription factor, the DNA/polypeptide complex having a molecular weight of approximately 47, 77 or 100 kDa, whereby the DNA/polypeptide complex is capable of silencing expression of the CD95 gene.
9. An isolated polynucleotide according to claim 2 that is capable of forming a DNA/polypeptide complex with a polypeptide transcription factor, the DNA/polypeptide complex having a molecular weight of approximately 59, 113 or 200-300 kDa, whereby the DNA/polypeptide complex is capable of enhancing expression of the CD95 gene.
An isolated polynucleotide having the sequence set out in: SEQ ID NO: 40 encoding a polypeptide transcription factor capable of binding to a regulatory polynucleotide and modulating expression of a downstream coding portion of a gene.
11. An isolated polynucleotide having at least 70% identity to a polynucleotide of claim 10, the at least 70% identity measured using the FASTA algorithm set at default parameters, the isolated polynucleotide encoding a polypeptide transcription factor capable of binding to a regulatory polynucleotide and modulating expression of a downstream coding portion of a gene.
12. An isolated polypeptide having the amino acid sequence identified in SEQ ID NO: 43, the polypeptide being capable of binding to a regulatory polynucleotide and modulating expression of a downstream coding portion of a gene. 21/06/01 49
13. A DNA construct comprising an isolated polynucleotide of claim 2, a coding portion of a gene, and a suitable promoter.
14. An isolated DNA construct comprising a polynucleotide encoding at least one of the following polypeptides: a polypeptide transcription factor comprising a region having at least 95% identity to the cold shock domain of human YB-1; a polypeptide transcription factor comprising a region having at least 95% identity to SEQ I NO: 43; and a polypeptide transcription factor comprising a region having at least 95% identity to human hnRNP D; and a suitable promoter and termination sequence.
A method for modulating expression of a coding portion of a gene, comprising: introducing a DNA construct of claim 13.
16. A method for modulating expression of a coding portion of a gene according to claim 15, additionally comprising introducing a DNA construct of claim 14.
17. A method for modulating expression of a coding portion of a gene associated with a polynucleotide of claim 2, comprising introducing a DNA construct of claim 14. Dated this 21 day of June 2001 Genesis Research Development Corporation Limited Patent Attorneys for the Applicant PETER MAXWELL ASSOCIATES
AU54065/01A 1996-08-30 2001-06-22 CD95 regulatory gene sequences and transcription factors Abandoned AU5406501A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU54065/01A AU5406501A (en) 1996-08-30 2001-06-22 CD95 regulatory gene sequences and transcription factors

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US08/713557 1996-08-30
AU54065/01A AU5406501A (en) 1996-08-30 2001-06-22 CD95 regulatory gene sequences and transcription factors

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU40367/97A Division AU732766B2 (en) 1996-08-30 1997-08-29 CD95 regulatory gene sequences and transcription factors

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU5406501A true AU5406501A (en) 2001-08-30

Family

ID=3740072

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU54065/01A Abandoned AU5406501A (en) 1996-08-30 2001-06-22 CD95 regulatory gene sequences and transcription factors

Country Status (1)

Country Link
AU (1) AU5406501A (en)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
Suske The Sp-family of transcription factors
Madden et al. Induction of cell growth regulatory genes by p53
Soeller et al. Isolation of cDNAs encoding the Drosophila GAGA transcription factor
Zambetti et al. Wild-type p53 mediates positive regulation of gene expression through a specific DNA sequence element.
Xia et al. Cross-talk between transcription factors NF-κB and C/EBP in the transcriptional regulation of genes
Batchelder et al. Transcriptional repression by the Caenorhabditis elegans germ-line protein PIE-1
Yuan et al. Developmental-specific activity of the FGF-4 enhancer requires the synergistic action of Sox2 and Oct-3.
AU743490B2 (en) NTN-2 member of TNF ligand family
Rouet et al. A potent enhancer made of clustered liver-specific elements in the transcription control sequences of human alpha 1-microglobulin/bikunin gene.
WO1998031701A1 (en) Endothelial pas domain protein
AU6031899A (en) Leptin induced genes
US6342596B1 (en) Molecular regulatory circuits to achieve sustained activation of genes of interest by a single stress
AU732766B2 (en) CD95 regulatory gene sequences and transcription factors
J. Tymms et al. Regulation of gene expression by transcription factors Ets‐1 and Ets‐2
US20070004666A1 (en) Methods for modulating apoptotic cell death
Webb et al. Differential regulation of immunoglobulin gene transcription via nuclear matrix-associated regions
Haller et al. Structure, chromosomal localization and expression of the mouse regulator of G-protein signaling10 gene (mRGS10)
AU726356B2 (en) Novel methods for the characterization of compounds which stimulate STF-1 expression in pancreatic islet cells
AU5368396A (en) Human stat4
JP2000509272A (en) Novel protein-TRAF6
AU5406501A (en) CD95 regulatory gene sequences and transcription factors
WO2002044363A1 (en) Methods for modulating apoptotic cell death
WO1998040506A1 (en) Use of an acute phase serum amyloid a gene promoter (a-saa promoter) in the treatment of diseases in mammals
US6818446B2 (en) Compositions and methods for the analysis of mucin gene expression and identification of drugs having the ability to inhibit mucin gene expression
Arenzana et al. Expression of the human gene coding for the α-chain of C4b-binding protein, C4BPA, is controlled by an HNF1-dependent hepatic-specific promoter

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
MK4 Application lapsed section 142(2)(d) - no continuation fee paid for the application