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A more recent version of this article appeared on December 28, 2007
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M703616200v1
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Papers In Press, published online ahead of print October 30, 2007
J. Biol. Chem, 10.1074/jbc.M703616200
Submitted on May 1, 2007
Accepted on October 30, 2007

Highly conserved sequences mediate the dynamic interplay of bHLH proteins regulating retinogenesis

Julio Hernandez, Lidia Matter-Sadzinski, Dorota Skowronska-Krawczyk, Florence Chiodini, Christine Alliod, Marc Ballivet, and Jean-Marc Matter

Biochemistry, University of Geneva, Geneva 1211

Corresponding Author: Jean-Marc.Matter{at}biochem.unige.ch

The ATH5 protein is central to the transcriptional network regulating the specification of retinal ganglion cells and its expression comes under the spatio-temporal control of several bHLH proteins in the course of retina development. Monitoring the in vivo occupancy of the ATH5 promoter by the ATH5, Ngn2 and NeuroM proteins and analyzing the DNA motifs they bind, we show that three evolutionarily conserved E-boxes are required for the bHLH proteins to control the different phases of ATH5 expression. E-box 4 mediates the activity of Ngn2, ATH5 and NeuroM along the pathway leading to the conversion of progenitors into newborn neurons. E-box 1, by mediating the antagonistic effects of Ngn2 and HES1 in proliferating progenitors, controls the expansion of the ATH5 expression domain in early retina. E-box 2 is required for the positive feedback by ATH5 that underlies the upregulation of ATH5 expression when progenitors are going through their last cell cycle. The combinatorial nature of the regulation of the ATH5 promoter suggests that the bHLH proteins involved have no assigned E-boxes but use a common set at which they either cooperate or compete to finely tune ATH5 expression as development proceeds.


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