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Mol Cell Biol, June 1998, p. 3384-3394, Vol. 18, No. 6
Brookdale Center for Developmental and
Molecular Biology1 and
Department of
Biochemistry,2 Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, New
York, New York 10029
Received 12 January 1998/Returned for modification 16 March
1998/Accepted 23 March 1998
The Drosophila homeobox gene fushi tarazu
(ftz) is expressed in a highly dynamic striped pattern in
early embryos. A key regulatory element that controls the
ftz pattern is the ftz proximal enhancer, which
mediates positive autoregulation via multiple binding sites for the Ftz
protein. In addition, the enhancer is necessary for stripe
establishment prior to the onset of autoregulation. We previously
identified nine binding sites for multiple Drosophila nuclear proteins in a core 323-bp region of the enhancer. Three of
these nine sites interact with the same cohort of nuclear proteins in
vitro. We showed previously that the nuclear receptor Ftz-F1 interacts
with this repeated module. Here we purified additional proteins
interacting with this module from Drosophila nuclear extracts. Peptide sequences of the zinc finger protein Ttk and the
transcription factor Adf-1 were obtained. While Ttk is thought to be a
repressor of ftz stripes, we have shown that both Adf-1 and
Ftz-F1 activate transcription in a binding site-dependent fashion.
These two proteins are expressed ubiquitously at the time
ftz is expressed in stripes, suggesting that either may
activate striped expression alone or in combination with the Ftz
protein. The roles of the nine nuclear factor binding sites were tested in vivo, by site-directed mutagenesis of individual and multiple sites.
The three Ftz-F1-Adf-1-Ttk binding sites were found to be
functionally redundant and essential for stripe expression in
transgenic embryos. Thus, a biochemical analysis identified cis-acting regulatory modules that are required for gene
expression in vivo. The finding of repeated binding sites for multiple
nuclear proteins underscores the high degree of redundancy built into embryonic gene regulatory networks.
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
A Binding Site for Multiple Transcriptional
Activators in the fushi tarazu Proximal Enhancer Is
Essential for Gene Expression In Vivo

*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Brookdale Center
for Developmental and Molecular Biology, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, Box 1126, One Gustave L. Levy Place, New York, NY 10029. Phone: (212)
241-1966. Fax: (212) 860-9279. E-mail:
pick{at}msvax.mssm.edu.
Publication no. 213 from the Brookdale Center for Molecular
Biology.
Present address: Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York,
NY 10021.
§
Present address: Cornell University Medical College, New York, NY
10021.
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