Human Oct-1L isoform has tissue-specific expression pattern similar to Oct-2.

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Citation

Luchina NN, Krivega IV, Pankratova EV

Human Oct-1L isoform has tissue-specific expression pattern similar to Oct-2.

Immunol Lett. 2003 Feb 3;85(3):237-41.

PubMed ID
12663137 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

POU homeodomain proteins are important regulators of ubiquitous as well as tissue-specific transcription. Ubiquitously expressed Oct-1 and tissue-specific Oct-2 proteins are members of the POU family and contain very similar DNA-binding POU domains. While Oct-1 is ubiquitous, Oct-2 is predominantly expressed in B cells, in activated T cells and in nervous system. Oct-1 is involved in regulation of some houskeeping genes-histone H2B, snRNAs as well as in tissue-specific regulation of immunoglobuline gene transcription and of some other genes. Here we report that novel alternatively spliced product of the human Oct-1 gene encode Oct-1L isoform with tissue-specific expression pattern, similar to Oct-2. Oct-1L differ from ubiquitously expressed Oct-1A in 5'-terminal exon (exon 1L). Analysis of nucleotide sequences from Human Genome Data Bank has located exon 1L about 108 kbp downstream ubiquitously expressed exon 1U. Amino terminus of Oct-1L show extensive similarity to amino terminus of Oct-2. We suppose, that Oct-1L may has a specific role in gene expression in lymphoid tissues and brain.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
POU domain, class 2, transcription factor 1P14859Details