Abstract

The untranslated first exon and the 5′-flanking region for the rat liver NADPH-cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase gene has been isolated from a Wistar-Furth genomic library. The remainder of the gene is composed of 15 exons which code for the mature protein and a 3′-nontranslated segment (T. D. Porter et al. Biochemistry, 1990, 29, 9814-9818). The 56-bp first exon resides 30.5 kb upstream from exon two, making the total gene length approximately 50 kb. While the region surrounding the start site (TC A GAGAC) was found to be homologous to a eukaryotic cap signal, the 5′ flanking region Possesses neither a TATA nor a CCAAT box. Instead it contains five GC-rich hexanucleotide consensus sequences for the transcription factor Sp1. These features clearly distinguish it from genes encoding other members of the mixed-function oxidase system, the cytochromes P450. Primer extension analysis and S1 nuclease mapping identified multiple transcriptional start sites. In many respects, the TATA-less oxidoreductase promoter resembles the promoter regions of dihydrofolate reductase and other housekeeping genes. Northern blot analysis demonstrates that this promoter is modulated by phenobarbital and trans-stilbene oxide, known inducers of oxidoreductase.

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