Genomic expansion and clustering of ZAD-containing C2H2 zinc-finger genes in Drosophila
Autor/innen
- H.R. Chung
- U. Schaefer
- H. Jaeckle
- S. Boehm
Journal
- EMBO Reports
Quellenangabe
- EMBO Rep 3 (12): 1158-1162
Zusammenfassung
C2H2 zinc-finger proteins (ZFPs) constitute the largest family of nucleic acid binding factors in higher eukaryotes. In silico analysis identified a total of 326 putative ZFP genes in the Drosophila genome, corresponding to Ο2.3% of the annotated genes. Approximately 29% of the Drosophila ZFPs are evolutionary conserved in humans and/or Caenorhabditis elegans. In addition, Ο28% of the ZFPs contain an N-terminal zinc-finger-associated C4DM domain (ZAD) consisting of Ο75 amino acid residues. The ZAD is restricted to ZFPs of dipteran and closely related insects. The evolutionary restriction, an expansion of ZAD-containing ZFP genes in the Drosophila genome and their clustering at few chromosomal sites are features reminiscent of vertebrate KRAB-ZFPs. ZADs are likely to represent protein-protein interaction domains. We propose that ZAD-containing ZFP genes participate in transcriptional regulation either directly or through site-specific modification and/or regulation of chromatin.