Abstract

The homeotic genes of Drosophila encode transcription factors that specify morphological differences between segments. To identify the genes that they control, we developed a chromatin immunopurification approach designed to isolate in vivo binding sites for the products of the homeotic gene Ultrabithorax. Here, we report the analysis of one immunopurified binding site. This 110 bp fragment maps within a regulatory region of a gene under homeotic control, connectin. A 4 kb DNA fragment, including the immunopurified binding site, is sufficient to reproduce the appropriate homeotic control within a subset of the full tissue distribution of connectin. Analysis of the role of the 110 bp binding site indicates that it mediates transcriptional controls by Ultrabithorax and other homeotic genes. This is the first report of a functional in vivo binding site isolated using the chromatin immunopurification method. We also show that the protein product of the connectin gene is predicted to be a cell-surface molecule containing leucine-rich repeats. The protein, connectin, can mediate cell-cell adhesion thus suggesting a direct link between homeotic gene function and processes of cell-cell recognition.

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