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  • Title: Molecular cloning and sequence analysis of the promoter region of mouse cyclin D1 gene: implication in phorbol ester-induced tumour promotion.
    Author: Eto I.
    Journal: Cell Prolif; 2000 Jun; 33(3):167-87. PubMed ID: 10959625.
    Abstract:
    Cyclin D1 is a cell cycle regulatory protein, which acts as a growth factor sensor to integrate extracellular signals with the cell cycle machinery, particularly during G1 phase of the cell cycle. Previous study using promotion-sensitive JB6 mouse epidermal cells, an in vitro model of the promotion stage of multistage carcinogenesis, showed that the expression of cyclin D1 is stimulated in the presence (but not in the absence) of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) in these cells maintained under anchorage-independent culture conditions. In the present study, to explore the molecular basis of this observation, the promoter region of mouse cyclin D1 gene was cloned and sequenced (GenBank accession number AF212040). Dot matrix comparison of mouse, human and rat promoter sequences indicated that the mouse promoter is homologous to the human and more so to the rat promoters. The mouse promoter, like human and rat promoters, lacks canonical TATA-box or TATA-like sequence, but it has one or possibly two initiator (Inr) or Inr-like sequences. Energy dot plot analysis predicted that the mouse promoter consists of three domains: (1) the 3' domain contains NF-kappaB response element, cAMP-response element (CRE), Inr or Inr-like elements, Sp1 binding site and Oct 1 (2) the middle domain contains another Sp1 binding site, E-box and E2F binding site and (3) the 5' domain contains TPA-response element (TRE) and a tandem silencer element. The cyclin D1 promoter sequence of either promotion-sensitive or resistant JB6 mouse epidermal cells was, except for a few minor differences, essentially identical to the sequence determined for a mouse genomic clone. Since TPA is capable of stimulating the expression of cyclin D1 not only through TRE but also through CRE and NF-kappaB response element in the promoter, we tentatively propose a sequence of events that possibly leads to TPA-induced, anchorage-independent synthesis of cyclins D1 and A in the promotion-sensitive JB6 mouse epidermal cells.
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