Dysregulated human renin expression in transgenic mice carrying truncated genomic constructs: evidence supporting the presence of insulators at the renin locus.
Zhou. Xiyou X; Weatherford. Eric T ET; Liu. Xuebo X; Born. Ella E; Keen. Henry L HL; Sigmund. Curt D CD
Key Findings
- Removing 2.5–10.4 kb of DNA upstream of the renin gene leads to severe mis‑regulation of human renin expression in transgenic mice.
- Despite the renin disruption, the neighboring ETNK2 gene remains correctly expressed, suggesting gene‑specific insulation.
- CTCF binding sites near renin and ETNK2 act as insulators that keep the two genes functionally separate.
Practical Outcomes
- There are no actionable insights for self‑directed health optimization. The findings are relevant only to basic gene‑regulation research and do not translate into protocols, dosages, or performance benefits for the biohacker community.
Summary
The study looks at how deleting DNA upstream of the human renin gene in mice affects renin production, showing that large deletions cause big changes in renin levels but keep nearby genes working normally. It’s a basic genetics experiment and doesn’t give any tips or data that biohackers could use for health, longevity, or performance.
Abstract
We previously generated transgenic mice carrying a large P1 artificial chromosome (PAC160) encompassing a 160-kb segment containing the human renin gene, two upstream genes, and one downstream gene. We also previously generated mutant PAC160 constructs lacking the distal enhancer and concluded it is required to maintain baseline expression of human renin, but is not required for tissue-specific, cell-specific, and regulated expression of renin in vivo. We now report two additional transgenic lines carrying random truncations of PAC160 upstream of the renin gene. Southern and PCR mapping studies indicate that the truncation break points in the two lines are located approximately 10.4 and 2.5 kb upstream of the renin gene causing a deletion of all DNA upstream of the break. We tested the hypothesis that large-scale deletion of DNA upstream of the human renin gene including the enhancer would cause dysregulation of human renin expression. Phenotypically, these truncations cause a severe dysregulation of human renin expression, but remarkably, a preservation of the normal tissue-specific expression of the human ethanolamine kinase 2 (ETNK2) gene which lies immediately downstream of renin. Several functional binding sites for CTCF, a mammalian insulator protein, were identified in and around the renin and ETNK2 loci by gel shift and chromatin immunoprecipitation. We conclude that there are sequences in and around the renin and ETNK2 loci which act as boundaries between neighboring genes which insulate them from each other. The study illustrates the value of taking a much wider genomic perspective when studying mechanisms regulating gene expression.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-07-16T00:00:00.000Z
10.1152/ajprenal.00384.2007
4
51