Estes, P.A., Mosher, J. and Crews, S.T. 2001. Drosophila single-minded
represses gene transcription by activating expression of repressive factors.
Dev. Biol. 232: 157-175.
The Drosophila single-minded gene controls CNS midline cell development
by both activating midline gene expression and repressing lateral CNS gene expression
in the midline cells. The mechanism by which Single-minded represses transcription
was examined using the ventral nervous system defective gene as a target
gene. Transgenic-lacZ analysis of constructs containing fragments of
the ventral nervous system defective regulatory region identified sequences
required for lateral CNS transcription and midline repression. Elimination of
Single-minded:Tango binding sites within the ventral nervous system defective
gene did not affect midline repression. Mutants of Single-minded that removed
the DNA binding and transcriptional activation regions abolished ventral
nervous system defective repression, as well as transcriptional activation
of other genes. The replacement of the Single-minded transcriptional activation
region with a heterologous VP16 transcriptional activation region restored the
ability of Single-minded to both activate and repress transcription. These results
indicate that Single-minded indirectly represses transcription by activating
the expression of repressive factors. Single-minded provides a model system
for how regulatory proteins that act only as transcriptional activators can
control lineage-specific transcription in both positive and negative modes.
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