Identification of a Coordinate Regulator of Interleukins 4, 13, and 5 by Cross-Species Sequence Comparisons

Gabriela G. Loots(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Richard M. Locksley(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Catherine M. Blankespoor(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Ze Wang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Webb Miller(Pennsylvania State University), Edward M. Rubin(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Kelly A. Frazer(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
Science
April 7, 2000
Cited by 803

Abstract

Long-range regulatory elements are difficult to discover experimentally; however, they tend to be conserved among mammals, suggesting that cross-species sequence comparisons should identify them. To search for regulatory sequences, we examined about 1 megabase of orthologous human and mouse sequences for conserved noncoding elements with greater than or equal to 70% identity over at least 100 base pairs. Ninety noncoding sequences meeting these criteria were discovered, and the analysis of 15 of these elements found that about 70% were conserved across mammals. Characterization of the largest element in yeast artificial chromosome transgenic mice revealed it to be a coordinate regulator of three genes, interleukin-4, interleukin-13, and interleukin-5, spread over 120 kilobases.


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