Genes for the human mitochondrial trifunctional protein alpha- and beta-subunits are divergently transcribed from a common promoter region.
Article Details
- CitationCopy to clipboard
Orii KE, Orii KO, Souri M, Orii T, Kondo N, Hashimoto T, Aoyama T
Genes for the human mitochondrial trifunctional protein alpha- and beta-subunits are divergently transcribed from a common promoter region.
J Biol Chem. 1999 Mar 19;274(12):8077-84.
- PubMed ID
- 10075708 [ View in PubMed]
- Abstract
Human HADHA and HADHB genes encode the subunits of an enzyme complex, the trifunctional protein, involved in mitochondrial beta-oxidation of fatty acids. Both genes are located in the same region of chromosome 2p23. We isolated genomic clones, including 5' flanking regions, for HADHA and HADHB. Sequencing revealed that both of these genes are linked in a head-to-head arrangement on opposite strands and have in common a 350-bp 5' flanking region. The 5' flanking region has bidirectional promoter activity within this region; two cis elements proved critical for the activity. Transcription factor Sp1 functions as an activator for the bidirectional promoter by binding to both elements. Therefore, expression of trifunctional protein subunits are probably coordinately regulated by a common promoter and by Sp1.