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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
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The hepatic expression of the alpha-2u-globulin gene family is controlled by a variety of hormones including steroids, growth hormone and insulin. The mechanisms by which these hormones affect alpha 2u-globulin expression are only partially understood. Recently we isolated and characterized clone RAP 01, an alpha 2u-globulin gene expressed in the liver. In preliminary experiments we noted that partial hepatectomy, a procedure which results in a sharp rise in the level of the oncoproteins c-Fos and c-Jun, also causes a transient induction of the messenger RNA corresponding to clone RAP 01. Using the DNAseI footprinting technique we were able to show that this clone contains a TPA (phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate)-responsive element (TRE) in its first intron. This element (denoted as element X) is identical to the consensus AP-1 binding site (TGACTCAG) and is protected by rat liver nuclear extracts as well as by purified c-Jun. Gel retardation experiments show that an oligonucleotide containing the TRE consensus sequence competes for binding of liver nuclear proteins to element X and that antibodies directed against the M2 peptide of the mouse Fos protein or the PEP-2 peptide of Jun prevent the formation of specific complexes with the same element. Moreover, element X functions as a TRE in transfected BWTG3 hepatoma cells treated with TPA. Co-transfection with fos and jun expression vectors mimics the effects of TPA suggesting that AP-1 is in fact the mediator of the observed response. It is concluded that the first intron of RAP 01 contains a functional Fos-Jun element.
Mol Cell Biochem 1993 Aug 25
PMID:A Fos-Jun element in the first intron of an alpha 2u-globulin gene. 750 7

Macrophages are stimulated by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of gram-negative organisms. The changes in LPS-stimulated macrophages include transcriptional activation of multiple immediate-early genes, which may contribute to the natural immunity to microorganisms. We have defined by deletion and mutational analysis LPS-responsive elements (LREs) in two chemokine genes, MuRantes and crg-2, which are activated in an immediate-early manner. LRE consists of two motifs, TCAYR, which is an AP-1 half site with two flanking bases, and (A/T) (G/C)NTTYC(A/T)NTTY, which resembles in part the interferon-stimulated responsive element (ISRE). The orientation of these two motifs relative to each other in MuRantes differed from that in crg-2. These two motifs are separated by 10 and 6 nonconsensus nucleotides in the MuRantes and crg-2 LREs, respectively. Stimulation of macrophage-like RAW 264.7 cells with alpha/beta interferon did not activate MuRantes, indicating that the ISRE-like motif in MuRantes does not have ISRE activity. Upon stimulation of RAW 264.7 cells with LPS, proteins capable of binding to LRE accumulate in the nuclei as measured by electrophoretic mobility shift assay. These LRE-binding proteins include c-Jun and CREB.
Mol Cell Biol 1994 May
PMID:Definition of a lipopolysaccharide-responsive element in the 5'-flanking regions of MuRantes and crg-2. 751 46

The differentiation of both embryonal carcinoma (EC) and embryonic stem (ES) cells can be triggered in culture by exposure to retinoic acid and results in the transcriptional induction of both the endogenous mouse keratin 18 (mK18) intermediate filament gene and an experimentally introduced human keratin 18 (K18) gene as well as a variety of other markers characteristic of extraembryonic endoderm. The induction of K18 in EC cells is limited, in part, by low levels of ETS and AP-1 transcription factor activities which bind to sites within a complex enhancer element located within the first intron of K18. RNA levels of ETS-2, c-Jun, and JunB increase upon the differentiation of ES cells and correlate with increased expression of K18. Occupancy of the ETS site, detected by in vivo footprinting methods, correlates with K18 induction in ES cells. In somatic cells, the ETS and AP-1 elements mediate induction by a variety of oncogenes associated with the ras signal transduction pathway. In EC cells, in addition to the induction by these limiting transcription factors, relief from negative regulation is mediated by three silencer elements located within the first intron of the K18 gene. These silencer elements function in F9 EC cells but not their differentiated derivatives, and their activity is correlated with proteins in F9 EC nuclei which bind to the silencers and are reduced in the nuclei of differentiated F9 cells. The induction of K18, associated with the differentiation of EC cells to extraembryonic endoderm, is due to a combination of relief from negative regulation and activation by members of the ETS and AP-1 transcription factor families.
Mol Cell Biol 1994 Dec
PMID:AP-1, ETS, and transcriptional silencers regulate retinoic acid-dependent induction of keratin 18 in embryonic cells. 752 51

Cellular retinoic acid-binding protein-I (CRABP-I) gene expression is induced in mouse embryonal carcinoma P19 cells specifically by retinoic acid (RA) and the induction is enhanced by sphinganine. The effects of retinoic acid and sphinganine on CRABP-I gene expression can be accounted for by a stimulation of its transcription rate. Using a lacZ reporter system, it was determined that a DNA fragment containing a putative AP-1 binding site in the promoter region of CRABP-I gene is required for the up-regulation of CRABP-I gene transcription.
Mol Cell Endocrinol 1995 Jun
PMID:Retinoic acid induction of mouse cellular retinoic acid-binding protein-I gene expression is enhanced by sphinganine. 755 83

T-lymphocyte proliferation is suppressed by 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 [1,25(OH)2D3], the active metabolite of vitamin D3, and is associated with a decrease in interleukin 2 (IL-2), gamma interferon, and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor mRNA levels. We report here that 1,25(OH)2D3-mediated repression in Jurkat cells is cycloheximide resistant, suggesting that it is a direct transcriptional repressive effect on IL-2 expression by the vitamin D3 receptor (VDR). We therefore examined vitamin D3-mediated repression of activated IL-2 expression by cotransfecting Jurkat cells with IL-2 promoter/reporter constructs and a VDR overexpression vector and by DNA binding. We delineated an element conferring both DNA binding by the receptor in vitro and 1,25(OH)2D3-mediated repression in vivo to a short 40-bp region encompassing an important positive regulatory element, NF-AT-1, which is bound by a T-cell-specific transcription factor, NFATp, as well as by AP-1. VDR DNA-binding mutants were unable to either bind to this element in vitro or repress in vivo; the VDR DNA-binding domain alone, however, bound the element but also could not repress IL-2 expression. These results indicate that DNA binding by VDR is necessary but not sufficient to mediate IL-2 repression. By combining partially purified proteins in vitro, we observed the loss of the bound NFATp/AP-1-DNA complex upon inclusion of VDR or VDR-retinoid X receptor. Order of addition and off-rate experiments indicate that the VDR-retinoid X receptor heterodimer blocks NFATp/AP-1 complex formation and then stably associates with the NF-AT-1 element. This direct inhibition by a nuclear hormone receptor of transcriptional activators of the IL-2 gene may provide a mechanistic explanation of how vitamin derivatives can act as potent immunosuppressive agents.
Mol Cell Biol 1995 Oct
PMID:Transcriptional repression of the interleukin-2 gene by vitamin D3: direct inhibition of NFATp/AP-1 complex formation by a nuclear hormone receptor. 756 32

The CYP11B1 gene, which encodes steroid 11 beta-monooxygenase, which is responsible for the synthesis of cortisol and corticosterone, the major glucocorticoids in mammals, is expressed specifically in the zona fasciculata of the adrenal cortex. We have analyzed the promoter region of the rat CYP11B1 gene by using a transient-expression system with adrenocortical Y1 cells and have identified a positive regulatory region. The region contained two adjacent sites for the binding of Y1-cell nuclear proteins: the binding site for an AP-1 transcription factor composed of JunD and a Fos-related protein, and the site for Ad4-binding protein (Ad4BP). The binding of the AP-1 factor to the regulatory region had a suppressive effect on that of Ad4BP in the nuclear extracts. Mutational analyses revealed that the transcriptional activation of the CYP11B1 gene promoter in Y1 cells was attributable to the AP-1 site but not to the Ad4 site. Subsequently, nuclear extracts of the zona fasciculata cells from the rat adrenal cortex were found to contain both AP-1 factor and Ad4BP, whose binding properties to the regulatory region were almost identical to those of the two factors in the Y1-cell nuclear extracts. Moreover, immunohistochemical analyses of rat adrenal cortices showed that the AP-1 factor was present in the nuclei of CYP11B1-expressing cells in the zona fasciculata but not in the nuclei of cells in the other zones. From these results, we propose that the AP-1 transcription factor found in this study plays an important role in the zone-specific expression of the CYP11B1 gene in rat adrenal cortex.
Mol Cell Biol 1995 Nov
PMID:Involvement of an AP-1 complex in zone-specific expression of the CYP11B1 gene in the rat adrenal cortex. 756 53

In GN4 rat liver epithelial cells, angiotensin II (Ang II) and other agonists which activate phospholipase C stimulate tyrosine kinase activity in a calcium-dependent, protein kinase C (PKC)-independent manner. Since Ang II also produces a proliferative response in these cells, we investigated downstream signaling elements traditionally linked to growth control by tyrosine kinases. First, Ang II, like epidermal growth factor (EGF), stimulated AP-1 binding activity in a PKC-independent manner. Because increases in AP-1 can reflect induction of c-Jun and c-Fos, we examined the activity of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase family members Erk-1 and -2 and the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), which are known to influence c-Jun and c-Fos transcription. Ang II stimulated MAP kinase (MAPK) activity but only approximately 50% as effectively as EGF; again, these effects were independent of PKC. Ang II also produced a 50- to 200-fold activation of JNK in a PKC-independent manner. Unlike its smaller effect on MAPK, Ang II was approximately four- to sixfold more potent in activating JNK than EGF was. Although others had reported a lack of calcium ionophore-stimulated JNK activity in lymphocytes and several other cell lines, we examined the role of calcium in GN4 cells. The following results suggest that JNK activation in rat liver epithelial cells is at least partially Ca(2+) dependent: (i) norepinephrine and vasopressin hormones that increase inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate stimulated JNK; (ii) both thapsigargin, a compound that produces an intracellular Ca(2+) signal, and Ca(2+) ionophores stimulated a dramatic increase in JNK activity (up to 200-fold); (iii) extracellular Ca(2+) chelation with ethylene glycol tetraacetic acid (EGTA) inhibited JNK activation by ionophore and intracellular chelation with 1,2-bis-(o-aminophenoxy)-ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid tetraacetoxymethyl-ester (BAPTA-AM) partially inhibited JNK activation by Ang II or thapsigargin; and (iv) JNK activation by Ang II was inhibited by pretreatment of cells with thapsigargin and EGTA, a procedure which depletes intracellular Ca(2+) stores. JNK activation following Ang II stimulation did not involve calmodulin; either W-7 nor calmidizolium, in concentrations sufficient to inhibit Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent kinase II, blocked JNK activation by Ang II. In contrast, genistein, in concentrations sufficient to inhibit Ca(2+)-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation, prevented Ang II and thapsigargin-induced JNK activation. In summary, in GN4 rat liver epithelial cells, Ang II stimulates JNK via a novel Ca(2+)-dependent pathway. The inhibition by genistein suggest that Ca(2+)-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation may modulate the JNK pathway in a cell type-specific manner, particularly in cells with a readily detectable Ca(2+)-regulated tyrosine kinase.
Mol Cell Biol 1995 Nov
PMID:Angiotensin II stimulates calcium-dependent activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase. 756 68

The transcription factors NFAT and AP-1 have been shown to be essential for inducible interleukin-2 (IL-2) expression in activated T cells. NFAT has been previously reported to bind to two sites in the IL-2 promoter: in association with AP-1 at the distal antigen response element at -280 and at -135. On the basis of DNase I footprinting with recombinant NFAT and AP-1 proteins, gel shift assays, and transfection experiments, we have identified three additional NFAT sites in the IL-2 promoter. Strikingly, all five NFAT sites are essential for the full induction of promoter activity in response to T-cell receptor stimulation. Four of the five NFAT sites are part of composite elements able to bind AP-1 in association with NFAT. These sites display a diverse range of cooperativity and interdependency on NFAT and AP-1 proteins for binding. One of the NFAT sites directly overlaps the CD28-responsive element. We present evidence that CD28 inducibility is conferred by the AP-1 component in NFAT-AP-1 composite elements. These findings provide further insight into the mechanisms involved in the regulation of the IL-2 promoter.
Mol Cell Biol 1995 Nov
PMID:Novel NFAT sites that mediate activation of the interleukin-2 promoter in response to T-cell receptor stimulation. 756 83

We have recently shown that doxorubicin (Dox), an antineoplastic drug and an inhibitor of terminal differentiation of myogenic and adipogenic cells, induces expression of Id, a gene encoding a helix-loop-helix transcriptional inhibitor. In this study we have investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying Dox-induced Id2A expression. We have also attempted to determine whether the genetic responses to Dox are related to the UV response, a well-characterized set of reactions to UV and DNA-damaging compounds that is partly mediated by AP-1. Transient transfection of a series of deletions and point mutation derivatives of the human Id2A promoter sequence shows that two closely spaced and inverted short elements similar to an activating transcription factor (ATF) binding site or a cyclic AMP response element (CRE) are necessary and sufficient for a full response to Dox. We refer to this element as the IdATF site. Sequences containing an IdATF site conferred Dox inducibility on a minimal heterologous promoter. An electrophoretic mobility shift assay showed nuclear proteins specifically interacting with the IdATF sequence. While oligonucleotides containing either legitimate ATF/CRE or AP-1 binding sequences competed for binding, antibody supershift experiments suggested that neither CREB/ATF-1 nor AP-1 are major factors binding to IdATF. Several independent criteria suggest that Dox inducibility was independent of Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C), cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase A), and tyrosine kinase. Moreover, we found that Dox also induces transcription from promoters of immediate-early genes through an AP-1-independent pathway. Taken together, our results suggest that Dox elicits a novel genetic response distinct from the classical UV response.
Mol Cell Biol 1995 Nov
PMID:Doxorubicin-induced Id2A gene transcription is targeted at an activating transcription factor/cyclic AMP response element motif through novel mechanisms involving protein kinases distinct from protein kinase C and protein kinase A. 756 91

The ultraviolet light (UV)-responsive element (URE) is an octamer sequence, TGACAACA, that shares homology with cyclic AMP-responsive element and activator protein 1 target sequences. Because URE-binding proteins have been shown to play a role in cellular response to DNA damage, we determined their expression and DNA-binding activities in repair-deficient cells. Of the complementation groups tested, only xeroderma pigmentosum (XP)-C cells induced expression of c-jun after UV irradiation; this correlated with XP-C binding to the URE and resembled the pattern observed with normal human fibroblasts. In other cases either a decrease (XP-A) or no change (XP-D) in URE-binding activities was noticed, which may be associated with decreased c-fos and poor c-jun expression after UV irradiation. That XP-C cells were the only complementation group exhibiting URE-binding activities similar to those of repair-proficient cells points to the possible correlation between proper repair of transcriptionally active genes and the expression and activities of proteins implicated in the cellular response to UV irradiation.
Mol Carcinog 1995 Oct
PMID:Ultraviolet light-responsive element (TGACAACA)-binding proteins in cells of xeroderma pigmentosum patients. 757 98


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