Abstract
A mounting body of evidence suggests that cell—cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) play critical roles in morphogenetic patterning. Perturbations of CAM binding can lead to altered tissue pattern and interruption of tissue interactions can lead to altered patterns of CAM expression. These observations focus attention on the factors responsible for the place-dependent expression of adhesion molecules such as N-CAM, the neural cell adhesion molecule. Our recent experiments
in vitro
indicate that transcription factors encoded by Hox and Pax genes bind to specific DNA sequences in the N-CAM promoter and activate that promoter. In particular, a region of the N-CAM promoter designated the homeodomain binding site (HBS) interacts with a variety of different homeodomain proteins. A different region of the N-CAM promoter binds to the paired domain of Pax proteins. These transcription factors differentially regulate the N-CAM gene. Such
in vitro
studies suggest that the N-CAM gene may be an
in vivo
target for homeobox and Pax gene products. Recent experiments on transgenic mice carrying normal and mutated segments of the N-CAM promoter linked to a lacZ reporter gene suggest that the N-CAM regulation observed
in vitro
actually has counterparts
in vivo
. The significance of these observations is that they connect gene products capable of morphoregulation (such as CAMs) to pattern-forming genes.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Cited by
56 articles.
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