The Pax-5 Gene Is Alternatively Spliced during B-cell Development*

  1. Patty Zwollo§,
  2. Hector Arrieta,
  3. Kaleo Ede,
  4. Karen Molinder,
  5. Stephen Desiderio and
  6. Roberta Pollock
  1. From the Department of Biology, Occidental College, Los Angeles, California 90041, the
  2. § Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, and the
  3. Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205
  1. To whom correspondence should be addressed:
    Dept. of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Life Sciences Addition 435, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720.
    Tel.: 510-642-2436; Fax: 510-643-6791; E-mail: Zwollop{at}bengal.oxy.edu

Abstract

The transcription factor Pax-5 is expressed during the early stages of B-cell differentiation and influences the expression of several B-cell-specific genes. In addition to the existing isoform (Pax-5, which we have named Pax-5a), we have isolated three new isoforms, Pax-5b, Pax-5d, and Pax-5e, from murine spleen and B-lymphoid cell lines using library screenings and polymerase chain reaction amplification. Isoforms Pax-5b and Pax-5e have spliced out their second exon, resulting in proteins with only a partial DNA-binding domain. Isoforms Pax-5d and Pax-5e have deleted the 3′-region, which encodes the transactivating domain, and replaced it with a novel sequence. The existence of alternative Pax-5 transcripts was confirmed using RNase protection assays. Furthermore, Pax-5a and Pax-5b proteins were detected using Western blot analysis. Pax-5a was detectable in pro-, pre-, and mature B-cell lines, but not in two plasmacytomas; Pax-5b was shown to be present at low levels in mature B-cell lines and, unexpectedly, in one plasma cell line, but not in pro-B-cell or T-cell lines. Mobility shift assays showed that in vitro translated Pax-5a and Pax-5d, but not Pax-5b or Pax-5e, could interact with a B-cell-specific activator protein-binding site on the blk promoter. Using this assay, we also showed that Pax-5d was present in nuclear extracts of some (but not all) B-lymphoid lines and interacts with the B-cell-specific activator protein-binding site. The pattern of differential expression of alternatively spliced Pax-5 isoforms suggests that they may be important regulators of transcription during B-cell maturation.

Footnotes

  • * This work was supported by a research in undergraduate institutions grant from the National Science Foundation. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

  • 1 The abbreviations used are:

    BSAP

    B-cell-specific activator protein

    PCR

    polymerase chain reaction.

    • Received October 16, 1996.
    • Revision received January 15, 1997.
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