Skip to content
Publicly Available Published by De Gruyter June 1, 2005

Characterization of the Transcription Factor MTF-1 from the Japanese Pufferfish (<I>Fugu rubripes</I>) Reveals Evolutionary Conservation of Heavy Metal Stress Response

  • A. Auf der Maur , T. Belser , G. Elgar , O. Georgiev and W. Schaffner
From the journal Biological Chemistry

Abstract

The pufferfish Fugu rubripes was recently introduced as a new model organism for genomic studies, since it contains a full set of vertebrate genes but only 13% as much DNA as a mammal. Fugu genes tend to be smaller and densely spaced due to shortening of introns and intergenic spacers. We isolated the Fugu gene for the metal-responsive transcription factor MTF-1 (MTF1), a mediator of heavy metal regulation and oxidative stress response previously characterized in mammals. In addition, most of the cDNA sequence was also determined. The 780 amino acid MTF-1 protein of Fugu is very similar to that of mouse and human, with 90% amino acid identity in the DNA binding zinc finger domain and 57% overall identity. Expression of the pufferfish cDNA in mammalian cells shows that Fugu MTF-1 has the same DNA binding specificity as its mammalian counterpart and also induces transcription in response to zinc and cadmium. The protein-coding part of the Fugu MTF-1 gene spans 6.4 kb and consists of 11 exons. Upstream region and first exon constitute a CpG island. The distance between stop codon and polyadenylation motifs is > 2 kb, suggesting a very long 3′ untranslated mRNA region, followed by another CpG island which may represent the promoter of the next gene downstream. Part of the MTF-1 genomic structure was also determined in the mouse, and some striking similarities were found: for example, the upstream adjacent gene in both species is INPP5P, encoding a phosphatase. The mouse MTF-1 promoter is also embedded in a CpG island, which however shares no sequence similarity to the one of Fugu. The Fugu CpG island is shorter than the one of the mouse and has no elevated [G+C] content; these and other data indicate that CpG islands of fish may represent a primordial stage of CpG island evolution.

Published Online: 2005-6-1
Published in Print: 1999-2-1

Copyright © 1999 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG

Downloaded on 19.4.2024 from https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/BC.1999.026/html
Scroll to top button