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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
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630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We studied the functional interaction between human embryonic zeta 2 globin promoter and the alpha globin regulatory element (HS-40) located 40 kb upstream of the zeta 2 globin gene. It was shown by transient expression assay that HS-40 behaved as an authentic enhancer for high-level zeta 2 globin promoter activity in K562 cells, an erythroid cell line of embryonic and/or fetal origin. Although sequences located between -559 and -88 of the zeta 2 globin gene were dispensable for its expression on enhancerless plasmids, they were required for the HS-40 enhancer-mediated activity of the zeta 2 globin promoter. Site-directed mutagenesis demonstrated that this HS-40 enhancer-zeta 2 globin promoter interaction is mediated by the two GATA-1 factor binding motifs located at -230 and -104, respectively. The functional domains of HS-40 were also mapped. Bal 31 deletion mapping data suggested that one GATA-1 motif, one GT motif, and two NF-E2/
AP1
motifs together formed the functional core of HS-40 in the erythroid-specific activation of the zeta 2 globin promoter. Site-directed mutagenesis further demonstrated that the enhancer function of one of the two NF-E2/
AP1
motifs of HS-40 is mediated through its binding to NF-E2 but not
AP1
transcription factor. Finally, we did genomic footprinting of the HS-40 enhancer region in K562 cells, adult nucleated erythroblasts, and different nonerythroid cells. All sequence motifs within the functional core of HS-40, as mapped by transient expression analysis, appeared to bind a nuclear factor(s) in living K562 cells but not in nonerythroid cells. On the other hand, only one of the apparently nonfunctional sequence motifs was bound with factors in vivo. In comparison to K562, nucleated erythroblasts from adult human bone marrow exhibited a similar but nonidentical pattern of nuclear factor binding in vivo at the HS-40 region. These data suggest that transcriptional activation of human embryonic zeta 2 globin gene and the fetal/adult alpha globin genes is mediated by erythroid cell-specific and developmental stage-specific nuclear factor-DNA complexes which form at the enhancer (HS-40) and the globin promoters.
Mol
Cell Biol 1993 Apr
PMID:Transcriptional activation of human zeta 2 globin promoter by the alpha globin regulatory element (HS-40): functional role of specific nuclear factor-DNA complexes. 845 11
We have characterized the putative
AP1
site in the backbone of pUC plasmids and found unique regulatory effects. The site, which mapped to a 19-bp region around nucleotide 37, conferred transcriptional activation by Jun or Jun/Fos that was boosted up to fivefold by unliganded thyroid hormone receptor (TR). Thyroid hormone changed potentiation of the Jun response by TR into repression. Although the plasmid sequence is a near-perfect consensus
AP1
site, the perfect consensus
AP1
site from the human collagenase promoter did not show the same effects. Deletion of the ligand binding domain of the TR eliminated the ability of the receptor to boost Jun activity, and deletion, mutation, or changes in specificity of the DNA binding domain eliminated both its ability to potentiate Jun activity and repress with hormone. In vitro Jun/Fos complexes bound the operative plasmid fragment, and the presence of TR interfered very little with Jun/Fos binding activity. Protein interaction studies in the absence of DNA showed that TR bound Jun protein in solution either in the presence or in the absence of hormone. These observations suggest a mechanism for synergy and repression by TR through modulation of Jun activity: positive when TR is unliganded, and negative when hormone is bound. They also suggest that the presence of the plasmid element can confound studies of the regulation of linked promoters.
Mol
Cell Biol 1993 May
PMID:Positive and negative modulation of Jun action by thyroid hormone receptor at a unique AP1 site. 847 60
The expression of NGFIA (also known as egr1, zif268, TIS8, krox24, and d2) is rapidly and transiently increased by nerve growth factor (NGF) in PC12 cells. The 5'-region of this gene includes four serum response elements (SREs), a cAMP-like response element, an
AP1
-like response element, and an SP1-binding site. From deletion analysis of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter constructs, we have established that the first 106 basepairs 5' of the transcriptional start site are sufficient for induction of NGFIA by NGF in PC12 cells; deletion beyond this point results in dramatically reduced induction of the gene. Using defined mutations in the NGFIA promoter and NGFIA-thymidine kinase hybrid promoters, we have defined three elements (SRE1, SRE2, and
AP1
-like) in the first 106 basepairs of upstream DNA, each of which contributes to induction of NGFIA by NGF. Cooperation by two of these elements (i.e. the two SREs or one SRE and the
AP1
-like element) is sufficient to confer transcriptional induction by NGF, but the combination of all three elements increased induction by NGF more effectively than a pair of elements. This suggests that the response of NGFIA to NGF is mediated by a cis-acting sequence that is composed of at least three distinct elements. An oligonucleotide composed of SRE1 and SRE2 that can confer the ability for NGF induction to heterologous promoter constructs complexes with proteins in PC12 cell nuclear extracts, but the protein-DNA complexes do not appear to be altered by NGF treatment, as measured by DNA mobility shift assays. We have also established that the regulatory region of NGFIA that mediates NGF induction also mediates the induction by serum and phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, suggesting that multiple signal transduction pathways must converge on these sequences to regulate the expression of this gene.
Mol
Endocrinol 1993 Mar
PMID:Nerve growth factor induces transcription of NGFIA through complex regulatory elements that are also sensitive to serum and phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. 848 78
It is well documented that a repeated CATT element in the human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) gene promoter is required for promoter activity. However, the transcription factors that are able to transactivate this enhancer element remain unidentified. Recently, we have found that nuclear factor YY1 can interact with the enhancer element. Here, we report that in addition to YY1, two other nuclear factors have been identified in the DNA-protein complexes formed by the CATT oligonucleotide and the Jurkat T-cell nuclear protein. One of these factors is
AP1
, and the other one is an Sp1-related protein. Results from transient transfection of Jurkat T cells have revealed that formation of both
AP1
and the Sp1-related complex is required for the full enhancer activity of the CATT element. This result is supported by cotransfection of a c-jun expression vector and mutational analysis of the
AP1
site or the Sp1-related protein binding site. In contrast, formation of the YY1 complex suppresses enhancer activity, since deletion of the YY1 complex induces an augmentation of the enhancer activity and overexpression of YY1 results in an attenuation of the enhancer activity. Results from the mechanism study have revealed that YY1 is able to inhibit transactivation mediated by either
AP1
or the Sp1-related protein, and YY1 suppressive activity is DNA binding dependent. Taken together, these data support the ideas that
AP1
and the Sp1-related nuclear protein are required for transactivation of the human GM-CSF gene promoter and that YY1 can suppress transactivation of the promoter even under inducible conditions.
Mol
Cell Biol 1996 Jan
PMID:Characterization of the human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor gene promoter: an AP1 complex and an Sp1-related complex transactivate the promoter activity that is suppressed by a YY1 complex. 852 92
Signaling via the Ras pathway involves sequential activation of Ras, Raf-1, mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MKK), and the extracellular signal-regulated (ERK) group of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases. Expression from the c-Fos, atrial natriuretic factor (ANF), and myosin light chain-2 (MLC-2) promoters during phenylephrine-induced cardiac muscle cell hypertrophy requires activation of this pathway. Furthermore, constitutively active Ras or Raf-1 can mimic the action of phenylephrine in inducing expression from these promoters. In this study, we tested whether constitutively active MKK, the molecule immediately downstream of Raf, was sufficient to induce expression. Expression of constitutively active MKK induce ERK2 kinase activity and caused expression from the c-Fos promoter, but did not significantly activate expression of reporter genes under the control of either the ANF or MLC-2 promoters. Expression of CL100, a phosphatase that inactivates ERKs, prevented expression from all of the promoters. Taken together, these data suggest that ERK activation is required for expression from the Fos, ANF, and MLC-2 promoters but MKK and ERK activation is sufficient for expression only from the Fos promoter. Constitutively active MKK synergized with phenylephrine to increase expression from a c-Fos- or an
AP1
-driven reporter. However, active MKK inhibited phenylephrine- and Raf-1-induced expression from the ANF and MLC-2 promoters. A DNA sequence in the MLC-2 promoter that is a target for inhibition by active MKK, but not CL100, was mapped to a previously characterized DNA element (HF1) that is responsible for cardiac specificity. Thus, activation of cardiac gene expression during phenylephrine-induced hypertrophy requires ERK activation but constitutive activation by MKK can inhibit expression by targeting a DNA element that controls the cardiac specificity of gene expression.
Mol
Biol Cell 1995 Nov
PMID:Inhibition of a signaling pathway in cardiac muscle cells by active mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase. 858 50
The POMC gene, encoding a hormonal precursor protein, is primarily expressed in the pituitary in a tissue-specific manner. The POMC gene is transcriptionally regulated by a variety of hormones and neuropeptides and the second messengers cAMP and Ca++. Using the corticotrope-derived AtT20 cell line, we have previously shown that overexpression of cFos stimulates POMC transcription. The aim of this work was to analyze whether cFos directly interacts with the POMC gene in basal and corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) stimulated cells. Using progressively deleted POMC promoter sequences or heterologous promoter constructs coupled to the chloramphenicol acetyl transferase reporter gene, we demonstrate the existence of a major cFos- responsive sequence within the first exon of the POMC gene. This sequence, TGACTAA, appears functionally indistinguishable from the canonical
AP1
binding site. When fused to a minimal promoter, this sequence confers inducibility by cFos and CRH. Gel shift analyses with CRH-stimulated AtT20 nuclear extracts or in vitro synthesized proteins revealed that this sequence efficiently binds Fos and Jun. Expression of c-fos anti-sense mRNA reduced CRH-stimulated POMC transcription, thus indicating that, at least in part, cFos mediates the effect of CRH on POMC transcription. However, deletion of this major exonic
AP1
site from the POMC constructs greatly reduced the effect of c-fos overexpression but did not suppress POMC stimulation by CRH, indicating that CRH stimulates POMC transcription by one or more cFos-independent mechanism(s).
Mol
Endocrinol 1995 Jun
PMID:Corticotropin-releasing hormone stimulates proopiomelanocortin transcription by cFos-dependent and -independent pathways: characterization of an AP1 site in exon 1. 859 20
Among the Jun family of transcription factors, only c-Jun displays full transforming potential in cooperation with activated c-Ha-Ras in primary rat embryo fibroblasts. c-Jun in combination with Ras can both induce foci of transformed cells from rat embryo fibroblast monolayers and promote the establishment of these foci as tumoral cell lines. JunB can also cooperate with Ras to induce foci but is unable to promote immortalization. We report here that JunD, in cooperation with Ras, induces foci with an efficiency similar to that of JunB. Artificial Jun/eb1 derivatives from each of the three Jun proteins were also analyzed. These constructs carry a heterologous homodimerization domain from the viral EB1 transcription factor and are thought to form only homodimers in the cell. We show here that these Jun/eb1 chimeras are potent transactivators of
AP1
sites and that they can cooperate with c-Ha-Ras to induce foci. However, among all the Ras-Jun and Ras-Jun/eb1 combinations tested, only foci from Ras-c-Jun can be efficiently expanded and maintained as long-term growing cultures. Therefore, we suggest that a heterodimer containing c-Jun might be required for in vitro establishment of these primary mammalian cells.
Mol
Cell Biol 1996 May
PMID:Stepwise transformation of rat embryo fibroblasts: c-Jun, JunB, or JunD can cooperate with Ras for focus formation, but a c-Jun-containing heterodimer is required for immortalization. 862 54
The leukocyte integrin gene, CD11c, is transcriptionally regulated and is expressed predominantly on differentiated cells of the myelomonocytic lineage. In this study we have demonstrated that the regions -72 to -63 and -132 to -104 of the CD11c promoter contain elements responsible for phorbol ester-induced differentiation of the myeloid cell line HL60. DNase I footprinting analysis revealed that these regions can bind purified Sp1, and supershift analysis with Sp1 antibody confirmed that Sp1 in HL60 nuclear extracts could bind these regions. Transfection analysis of CD11c promoter-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase constructs containing deletions of these Sp1-binding sites revealed that these sites are essential for expression of the CD11c gene in HL60 cells but not in the T-cell line Molt4 or the cervical carcinoma cell line HeLa. Moreover, cotransfection of pPacSp1 along with these CD11c promoter-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase constructs into Sp1-deficient Drosophila Schneider 2 cells verified that these sites are essential for Sp1-dependent expression of the CD11c promoter. In vivo genomic footprinting revealed that Sp1 contacts the CD11c promoter within the regions -69 to -63 and -116 to -105 in phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate-differentiated HL60 cells but not in undifferentiated HL60 cells or in Molt4 or HeLa cells. Cotransfection assays in HL60 cells revealed that Sp1 acts synergistically with Ap1 to activate CD11c. Further, both Sp1 sites are capable of cooperating with
AP1
. In vitro DNase I footprinting analysis with purified Sp1 and c-jun proteins showed that Sp1 binding could facilitate binding of c-jun. We propose that myeloid-specific expression of the CD11c promoter and is facilitated by cooperative interaction between the Sp1- and Ap1-binding sites.
Mol
Cell Biol 1996 Jun
PMID:Sp1 binds two sites in the CD11c promoter in vivo specifically in myeloid cells and cooperates with AP1 to activate transcription. 864 5
Expression of the phenylalanine hydroxylase gene in livers and kidneys of rodents is activated at birth and is induced by glucocorticoids and cyclic AMP in the liver. Regulatory elements in a 10-kb fragment upstream of the mouse gene have been characterized. The promoter lacks TAATA and CCAAT consensus sequences and shows only extremely weak activity in transitory expression assays with phenylalanine hydroxylase-producing hepatoma cells. No key elements for regulation of promoter activity are localized within 2 kb of upstream sequences. However, a liver-specific DNase I-hypersensitive site at kb -3.5 comprises a tissue-specific and hormone-inducible enhancer. This enhancer contains multiple protein binding sites, including sites for ubiquitous factors (NF1 and
AP1
), the glucocorticoid receptor, and the hepatocyte-enriched transcription factors hepatocyte nuclear factor 1 (HNF1) and C/EBP. Mutation revealed that the last two sites are critical not only for basal activity but also for obtaining a maximal hormone response. Efficient transcription from the highly inducible promoter shows absolute dependence upon the enhancer at kb - 3.5, which in turn requires HNF1 and C/EBP as well as hormones. The regulatory region of the mouse phenylalanine hydroxylase gene differs totally from that of humans, even though the genes of both species are expressed essentially in the liver. Furthermore, the phenylalanine hydroxylase gene of mice shows an expression pattern very similar to those of the rodent tyrosine aminotransferase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase genes, yet each shows a different organization of its regulatory region.
Mol
Cell Biol 1996 Jun
PMID:The activity of the highly inducible mouse phenylalanine hydroxylase gene promoter is dependent upon a tissue-specific, hormone-inducible enhancer. 864 24
The leukocyte integrin gene, CD11c, encodes the chi subunit of the p150,95 (CD11c.CD18) receptor. Expression of the CD11c gene is predominately seen in monocytes, but has also been detected in some B- and T-cell neoplasms and in some large-cell lymphomas of uncertain origin. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms that govern the expression of CD11c, we have cloned and characterized the promoter region of this gene. The DNase I footprint and mobility shift analyses revealed five sites within the -86 to +40 region that interact with nuclear proteins. The -62 to -44 region contains two consensus sequences for
AP1
(referred to as
AP1
-1 and
AP1
-2) and were shown to bind purified c-jun protein. Co-transfection of c-fos and c-jun expression constructs with a CD11c promoter-CAT fusion into HL60 cells led to a 6.7-fold increase in CD11c promoter activity. We show that c-fos and c-jun mediate their effects through both
AP1
-1 and
AP1
-2 which function in an additive manner. Regions -42 to -34 and -13 to -5 contain consensus sequences for Ets factors (referred to as Ets C and Ets A, respectively). Deletion of Ets resulted in a significant reduction in phorbol ester-induced expression of CD11c, whereas deletion of Ets A led to only a modest loss in CD11c expression. We show that Ets C cooperates with the
AP1
sites to regulate CD11c expression.
Mol
Immunol 1996 Feb
PMID:Regulation of the leukocyte integrin gene CD11c is mediated by AP1 and Ets transcription factors. 864 34
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