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    Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1994 Sep 27;91(20):9372-6.

    c-Krox, a transcriptional regulator of type I collagen gene expression, is preferentially expressed in skin.

    Galéra P, Musso M, Ducy P, Karsenty G.

    Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston 77030.

    We have cloned a mouse cDNA that is a member of the Krox gene family and encodes a protein we have named c-Krox. The c-Krox protein contains three zinc fingers of the Cys2His2 type. c-Krox binds specifically to a guanine-rich cis-acting element present twice in the promoter element of the mouse alpha 1(I) collagen gene. Study of c-Krox gene expression shows that c-Krox is markedly enriched in skin, one of the two major sites of type I collagen synthesis, but is absent in bone, the other main type I collagen-producing tissue, indicating that type I collagen gene expression is differentially regulated in skin and bone. DNA transfection experiments in mouse NIH 3T3 fibroblasts, cells that express the c-Krox gene, or in Drosophila S2 cells, which do not express c-Krox, reveal that c-Krox can activate transcription of a reporter gene linked to several copies of its binding site in the alpha 1(I) collagen promoter. Thus, c-Krox is only the second member of the Krox family for which a target gene has been identified. The selective spatial pattern of expression of its mRNA and its transcription activation ability suggest that c-Krox may be an important regulator of type I collagen skin specific expression in physiologic conditions and in fibrotic diseases such as scleroderma.

    PMID: 7937772 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 44814

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