The mouse thymosin beta 4 gene: structure, promoter identification, and chromosome localization.
Li. X X; Zimmerman. A A; Copeland. N G NG; Gilbert. D J DJ; Jenkins. N A NA; Yin. H L HL
Key Findings
- Only one mouse thymosin‑beta‑4 gene exists
- Lymphoid cells make a unique transcript by using an alternate splice site
- The gene’s promoter has typical elements and the locus is on the distal X chromosome linked to Btk and Gja6
Practical Outcomes
- The findings are not directly useful for supplementation or biohacking protocols. They mainly expand scientific understanding of how the gene is regulated, which doesn’t translate into actionable dosing or performance strategies for enthusiasts.
Summary
This study maps the mouse thymosin‑beta‑4 gene, shows it’s a single gene with a special version in immune cells, describes its promoter region, and places it on the X chromosome. It’s basic gene‑science and doesn’t give any tips on using the peptide for health or performance.
Abstract
Thymosin beta 4 (T beta 4) is an actin monomer sequestering protein that may have a critical role in modulating the dynamics of actin polymerization and depolymerization in nonmuscle cells. Its regulatory role is consistent with the many examples of transcriptional regulation of T beta 4 and of tissue-specific expression. Furthermore, lymphocytes have a unique T beta 4 transcript relative to the ubiquitous transcript found in many other tissues and cells. To determine how T beta 4 gene expression is regulated and how the alternative transcripts are derived, we cloned the mouse T beta 4 gene. We established that there is a single mouse T beta 4 gene and found that the lymphoid-specific transcript is generated by extending the ubiquitous exon 1 with an alternate downstream splice site. The transcription start site is defined by primer extension analysis, and the 5'-flanking region has many of the characteristics of a promoter. It is pyrimidine-rich and contains typical promoter elements, including a GC box, an initiator site, and consensus transcription factor binding sites. The mouse T beta 4 gene locus (Ptmb4) is located by interspecific backcross mapping to the distal region of the mouse X chromosome, linked to Btk and Gja6.
Study Information
pubmed
1996
1996-03-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.1006/geno.1996.0133