Modification of the 5′ untranslated leader region of the maize Activator element leads to increased activity in Arabidopsis

Genetic Markers 0301 basic medicine Kanamycin Resistance Arabidopsis Drug Resistance Transposases Methylation Nucleotidyltransferases Zea mays 03 medical and health sciences Transformation, Genetic RNA, Plant DNA Transposable Elements Streptomycin RNA, Messenger Glucuronidase Sequence Deletion
DOI: 10.1007/bf00282223 Publication Date: 2004-09-19T00:29:13Z
ABSTRACT
In contrast to its behavior in tobacco and tomato, the maize transposable element Ac is relatively inactive in Arabidopsis. We show here that removal of 537 bp within a CpG-rich region of the Ac 5' untranslated leader region significantly increases the excision frequency of the element in Arabidopsis. This increase did not appear to be correlated with the removal of sequences that are methylated in inactive Ac elements in maize, as these sites were not methylated in Ac elements in Arabidopsis transformants. The deletion within the 5' untranslated leader did not increase Ac activity by increasing levels of steady-state transposase mRNA, as assayed by RNase protection experiments. Moreover, there was no correlation between the levels of steady-state transposase mRNA and Ac element activity. This suggests that post-transcriptional regulation of Ac activity occurs in Arabidopsis.
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