Abstract

The human gene for the replication-unlinked histone protein H2A.X is a naturally occurring chimera that contains a replication-unlinked promoter yet produces a stemloop mRNA characteristic of replication-linked histone genes. Consistent with the latter attribute, the H2A.X gene was found to lack introns. The promoter of the H2A.X gene was localized to a 120-base pair region upstream of the transcription start site, a region which included a TATA and two CCAAT sequence elements. The proximal of the two CCAAT elements was shown to be an important determinant of H2A.X gene promoter activity. In a comparative study with the CCAAT elements from the replication-linked H2A.1a gene and the replication-unlinked H2A.Z gene, the proximal CCAAT element of the H2A.X gene was found to bind nuclear factors also bound by CCAAT elements in the latter but not in the former. The specificity of the replication-unlinked H2A.X and H2A.Z gene promoters for CCAAT-binding transcription factors appeared to also reside in short homologous sequences about 10 base pairs away on either side of the CCAAT sequence.

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