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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Expression of the glycoprotein hormone alpha gene is regulated divergently by glucocorticoids in different cell types. Coexpression of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) with an alpha-CAT reporter gene caused activation of alpha promoter activity in fibroblasts, but repression in JEG-3 choriocarcinoma cells, indicating that cell-specific factors dictate positive vs. negative regulation of this promoter by GR. Cell-specific sequences and other enhancer elements in the the alpha gene have been relatively well characterized in JEG-3 cells, and this model was used to further examine the mechanism of transcriptional repression by glucocorticoids. Promoter mutagenesis indicated that the degree of GR-mediated repression was impaired by a variety of deletional and site-directed mutations between -171 and -111 bp, a region that includes both cell-specific and cAMP response elements (CREs). In an attempt to further localize a negative glucocorticoid response element (GRE) sequence, binding studies were used to assess GR interactions with alpha promoter DNA sequences. Using avidin-biotin complex DNA binding assays, a series of overlapping alpha promoter DNA sequences between -170 to 29 basepairs were tested, but each failed to bind GR, whereas a control GRE avidly bound receptor. Similarly, in competition assays in transfected CV-1 cells, the alpha gene 5'-flanking sequence did not compete for GR stimulation of a glucocorticoid responsive reporter gene, whereas a sequence that contains known GR-binding sites (murine mammary tumor virus) effectively inhibited GR-mediated expression. The absence of high affinity GR-binding sites in the alpha promoter suggested that mutations that affected GR inhibition may have eliminated recognition sites for transactivators, which are themselves targets for the GR, rather than altering specific negative GRE sites in the DNA sequence. To examine this possibility, GR repression was studied using chimeric transcription factors. The transcription-activating domains of several different proteins (
CREB
, thyroid hormone receptor, or VP16) were linked to the DNA-binding domain of Gal-4, and transcription was driven by the Gal-4 recognition site (UAS). GR markedly repressed transactivation by Gal-4-
CREB
and, to a lesser degree, the Gal-4-thyroid hormone receptor and Gal-4-VP16 chimeric proteins. Repression occurred when UAS was linked to either the alpha promoter or to the E1B promoter. Thus, inhibition occurs in the absence of either the CRE or the proximal alpha promoter. These results support a mechanism in which GR-mediated repression in JEG-3 cells occurs by receptor interference with the transactivating potential of enhancer-binding proteins or associated transcription factors.
Mol
Endocrinol 1991 Jan
PMID:Repression of the human glycoprotein hormone alpha-subunit gene by glucocorticoids: evidence for receptor interactions with limiting transcriptional activators. 170 98
Primate and equine species are thought to be unique among mammals in synthesizing placental gonadotropin glycoprotein hormones. Human chorionic gonadotropin (CG) and equine pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin (PMSG) are produced in placenta by the specific activation of a glycoprotein hormone alpha-subunit gene and a corresponding beta-subunit gene. The evolutionary mechanisms for the apparently independent acquisition of tissue specificity were investigated by cloning the 5' flanking region of the equine alpha-subunit gene and comparing the DNA elements and trans-acting factors involved in placental expression. We find that though the equine gene is expressed and induced by cAMP, it does not contain the elements known to confer tissue-specific expression to the human gene, the cAMP response element (CRE) and the trophoblast-specific element (TSE), nor does it bind to the trans-acting factors
CREB
and TSEB. Instead, an additional factor (alpha-ACT) is found which binds to the equine and human, but not the murine, alpha-subunit genes in a region between the positions of the CRE and TSE and confers cAMP responsiveness.
Mol
Endocrinol 1991 Feb
PMID:Evolution of placenta-specific gene expression: comparison of the equine and human gonadotropin alpha-subunit genes. 171 31
Spermatogenesis is a temporally regulated developmental process by which the gonadotropin-responsive somatic Sertoli and Leydig cells act interdependently to direct the maturation of the germinal cells. The metabolism of Sertoli and Leydig cells is regulated by the pituitary gonadotropins FSH and LH, which, in turn, activate adenylate cyclase. Because the cAMP-second messenger pathway is activated by FSH and LH, we postulated that the cAMP-responsive element-binding protein (CREB) plays a physiological role in Sertoli and Leydig cells, respectively. Immunocytochemical analyses of rat testicular sections show a remarkably high expression of CREB in the haploid round spermatids and, to some extent, in pachytene spermatocytes and Sertoli cells. Although most of the CREB antigen is detected in the nuclei, some CREB antigen is also present in the cytoplasm. Remarkably, the cytoplasmic CREB results from the translation of a unique alternatively spliced transcript of the CREB gene that incorporates an exon containing multiple stop codons inserted immediately up-stream of the exons encoding the DNA-binding domain of CREB. Thus, the RNA containing the alternatively spliced exon encodes a truncated transcriptional
transactivator protein
lacking both the DNA-binding domain and nuclear translocation signal of CREB. Most of the CREB transcripts detected in the germinal cells contain the alternatively spliced exon, suggesting a function of the exon to modulate the synthesis of CREB. In the Sertoli cells we observed a striking cyclical (12-day periodicity) increase in the levels of CREB mRNA that coincides with the splicing out of the restrictive exon containing the stop codons. Because earlier studies established that FSH-stimulated cAMP levels in Sertoli cells are also cyclical, and the CREB gene promoter contains cAMP-responsive enhancers, we suggest that the alternative RNA splicing controls a positive autoregulation of CREB gene expression mediated by cAMP.
Mol
Endocrinol 1991 Oct
PMID:Developmental stage-specific expression of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate response element-binding protein CREB during spermatogenesis involves alternative exon splicing. 811 64
To elucidate how methylation of specific sites in plant DNA might control transcription, we examined the effect of DNA methylation at CpG sequences on the binding of plant nuclear factors to an oligonucleotide duplex containing the consensus sequence for mammalian
CREB
(cAMP response element binding protein).
CREB
is part of the ATF (activating transcription factor) family of mammalian proteins specifically binding to 5'-TGACGTCA-3' and related sequences. Proteins recognizing the
CREB
-specific ligand were identified in nuclear extracts of pea seeds, wheat germ, cauliflower, and soybean leaves using electrophoretic mobility shift assays. Cytosine methylation inhibited binding of this protein in all these extracts, and so this sequence-specific DNA-binding activity is referred to as methylation-inhibited binding protein 1 (MIB-1). Sites somewhat similar to that of the
CREB
ligand are found in the upstream regions of a wheat histone H3 gene and tomato and pea ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase genes. These sites were bound preferentially by distinct proteins that may be related to the previously described plant proteins HBP-1, HSBF, ASF-1, or GBF. Methylation of cytosine residues at these sites and at a site for MIB-1 located upstream of a soybean proline-rich protein gene also reduced specific binding with all the nuclear extracts tested. Similarly, substitution of the central CpG dinucleotide with TpG decreased binding.
Plant
Mol
Biol 1991 Jul
PMID:CpG methylation inhibits binding of several sequence-specific DNA-binding proteins from pea, wheat, soybean and cauliflower. 183 Oct 56
F9 embryonal carcinoma (EC) stem cells contain an E1a-like activity that is absent from differentiated derivatives. We have previously characterized proteins present in F9 EC cell extracts that bind to the E1a-dependent E2A promoter and have shown that two of them, TF68 and DRTF1, are required for efficient transcription in vitro (N. B. La Thangue, B. Thimmapaya, and P. W. J. Rigby, Nucleic Acids Res. 18:2929-2938, 1990). We now show that the E1a-like activity is detectable in transient transfection assays. Deletion mutations show that a distal sequence element, which includes the ATF/
CREB
consensus, is required for expression in both cell types, although it does not mediate the down-regulation of promoter activity that accompanies differentiation. A series of point mutations generated by in vitro mutagenesis confirm this and show that sequences around -60 are necessary for efficient expression in stem cells but not in differentiated derivatives. These sequences bind DRTF1, the activity of which is strongly down-regulated during differentiation. Surprisingly, mutations in a previously uncharacterized region of the promoter restore activity to a promoter carrying the -60 mutation and lead to the formation of a new DNA-protein complex.
Mol
Cell Biol 1991 Nov
PMID:Sequences and factors required for the F9 embryonal carcinoma stem cell E1a-like activity. 183 34
CREB
is a cAMP-responsive nuclear DNA-binding protein that binds to cAMP response elements and stimulates gene transcription upon activation of the cAMP signalling pathway. The protein consists of an amino-terminal transcriptional transactivation domain and a carboxyl-terminal DNA-binding domain (bZIP domain) comprised of a basic region and a leucine zipper involved in DNA recognition and dimerization, respectively. Recently, we discovered a testis-specific transcript of
CREB
that contains an alternatively spliced exon encoding multiple stop codons.
CREB
encoded by this transcript is a truncated protein lacking the bZIP domain. We postulated that the antigen detected by
CREB
antiserum in the cytoplasm of germinal cells is the truncated
CREB
that must also lack its nuclear translocation signal (NTS). To test this hypothesis we prepared multiple expression plasmids encoding carboxyl-terminal deletions of
CREB
and transiently expressed them in COS-1 cells. By Western immunoblot analysis as well as immunocytochemistry of transfected cells, we show that
CREB
proteins truncated to amino acid 286 or shorter are sequestered in the cytoplasm, whereas a
CREB
of 295 amino acids is translocated into the nucleus. Chimeric CREBs containing a heterologous NTS fused to the first 248 or 261 amino acids of
CREB
are able to drive the translocation of the protein into the nucleus. Thus, the nine amino acids in the basic region involved in DNA recognition between positions 287 and 295 (RRKKKEYVK) of
CREB
contain the NTS. Further, mutation of the lysine at position 290 in
CREB
to an asparagine diminishes nuclear translocation of the protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Mol
Endocrinol 1991 Oct
PMID:Nuclear translocation and DNA recognition signals colocalized within the bZIP domain of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate response element-binding protein CREB. 183 41
A cAMP regulatory element (CRE) at nucleotide position -170 of the fibronectin gene was characterized previously (Dean, D. C., Blakeley, M. S., Newby, R. F., Ghazal, P., Hennighausen, L., and Bourgeois, S. (1989)
Mol
. Cell. Biol. 9, 1498-1506). Here we identify two additional low affinity CREs at nucleotide positions -260 and -415 which differ in sequence by 1 base pair. Interestingly, these CREs did not compete for binding of nuclear proteins in gel retardation assays and partial tryptic digestion of protein-DNA complexes produced a different pattern with each CRE, indicating that they bind different proteins. CRE (-170) competed for binding of proteins to both CREs, suggesting that it may represent a composite of the two elements. CRE (-415) competed effectively for binding of nuclear proteins to the somatostatin gene CRE, suggesting that, like the somatostatin CRE, it binds the nuclear protein
CREB
. On the other hand, CRE (-260) appears to bind the nuclear protein PEA-2, which also binds a site in the polyoma virus enhancer. In summary, disruption of dyad symmetry in the 3' region of the CRE, as occurs with CRE (-260) and CRE (-415), results in a lower affinity site and may also change the specificity for different nuclear proteins.
...
PMID:Characterization of three different elements in the 5'-flanking region of the fibronectin gene which mediate a transcriptional response to cAMP. 184 87
To investigate the synergism or cooperative interaction between transcription elements, we have designed and constructed a series of synthetic polymerase II promoters with different combinations of elements. These include three different CCAAT boxes, which correspond to the binding sites for CP1, CP2, and NFI, a GC box, a CACCC box, and an ATF/
CREB
-binding site. The synthetic promoters containing these elements in proximal positions were linked to a test gene (CAT). Tandem repeats of AP1- and AP2-binding sites, the simian virus 40 enhancer, and DNA-binding sites for GAL-estrogen receptor were cloned downstream of the test gene. The strength of these promoters was then tested in transient-expression assays in HeLa TK- cells. In the context of the adenovirus major late promoter TATA box, the promoters containing only certain combinations of elements are active in this assay. Some elements appear to cooperate nearly universally, but others exhibit strong selectivity. These results indicate strongly selective synergistic interactions between elements and suggest that levels of promoter strength may be determined by the extent of compatibility between factors bound to proximal and enhancer sites.
Mol
Cell Biol 1991 Sep
PMID:Differential ability of proximal and remote element pairs to cooperate in activating RNA polymerase II transcription. 187 39
Three cis-acting domains that contribute to the basal promoter activity of the human c-fos gene were identified. One encompasses the serum response element and has been previously described. Another spans an NF1-like site situated at -170. Mutations and in vitro protein binding assays pinpoint this site as the sole basal element of the medial domain. The third, or promoter-proximal, domain can be divided into several distinct sites, one containing a directly repeated GC-rich element and the other consisting of partially overlapping recognition sites for transcription factors ATF/
CREB
and MLTF/USF. Each of these sites contributes to basal activity as assayed by transient transfections and by in vitro transcription. Consistent with this, several complexes could be visualized between this region and nuclear proteins in vitro and genomic footprinting demonstrated that both elements are constitutively bound in vivo. On the basis of these results, we conclude that all three domains are necessary for full c-fos promoter function.
Mol
Cell Biol 1991 Mar
PMID:Multiple basal promoter elements determine the level of human c-fos transcription. 189 6
Human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I) has been associated with an adult form of T-cell leukemia as well as tropical spastic paraparesis, a neurodegenerative disease. Adult T-cell leukemia patients express high levels of the type 1 isoform of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta 1), which is mediated by the effects of the HTLV-I Tax
transactivator protein
on the TGF-beta 1 promoter. To understand further the regulation of TGF-beta 1 expression by Tax, we examined its expression in transgenic mice carrying the HTLV-I tax gene. We show that tumors from these mice and other tissues, such as submaxillary glands and skeletal muscle, which express high levels of tax mRNA selectively express high levels of TGF-beta 1 mRNA and protein. Moreover, TGF-beta 1 significantly stimulated the incorporation of tritiated thymidine into one of three cell lines derived from neurofibromas of tax-transgenic mice, which suggests that the excessive production of TGF-beta 1 may play a role in tumorigenesis and that these mice may serve as a useful model for studying the biological effects of TGF-beta in vivo.
Mol
Cell Biol 1991 Oct
PMID:Overexpression of transforming growth factor-beta in transgenic mice carrying the human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I tax gene. 192 42
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