Leukocyte adhesion receptors (LFA-1; Mac-1; p150,95) are a family of heterodimeric cell-surface adhesion molecules expressed exclusively in granulocytes, lymphocytes, and macrophages. Expression of these proteins is under complex regulatory control, but to date promoters for these genes have not been identified. The CD18 gene codes for the common beta-subunit of the leukocyte adhesion receptors. Transcription of CD18 is highly tissue-specific, hormonally inducible (by retinoic acid [RA]), and coordinately regulated with leukocyte integrin alpha- chains. To identify the CD18 promoter, we screened a human genomic phage library with a human CD18 cDNA probe and obtained a clone that contains an exon coding for the 5′ untranslated region (UTR). Using rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE), RNAse protection, S1 nuclease, and primer extension assays, we demonstrated the existence of multiple transcription start sites clustered in a 45-nt region. We investigated the transcription-promoting activity of the genomic sequences 5′ to the CD18 gene by performing transient expression assays with a growth hormone reporter gene in various hematopoietic cell lines. The CD18 promoter was active in Jurkat cells, a lineage that normally expresses CD18 but was considerably less active in K562, an early erythroid line that does not normally express CD18. The genomic sequences upstream of the start site cluster lack CAAT and TATA boxes, but have two Sp1 binding sites and 10 T(G/C)AC(C/A) boxes, which may represent binding sites for RA receptors (RAR). These features distinguish the CD18 promoter from the promoters of other tissue-specific, hormone-inducible genes, and may be representative of leukocyte integrin promoters in general.

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