Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (somatostatin)
22,083 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The transactivation of genes through the cAMP-regulated enhancer (CRE) is proposed to occur by the binding and phosphorylation of the transcription factor CREB (CRE-binding protein). Originally believed to be a single protein, more than 10 different CREB proteins have been cloned. The contributions of each of these factors to gene regulation have yet to be determined unambiguously. We have isolated a CREB cDNA that contains a mutation of a single amino acid in the DNA-binding domain. In gel shift assays, this mutant, designated KCREB, is unable to bind to the somatostatin (SS) CRE. In addition, KCREB acts as a dominant repressor of the wild-type factor, blocking the ability of wild-type CREB to bind to the CRE when present as a KCREB:CREB heterodimer. The KCREB mutant also acts as a dominant repressor in vivo, completely blocking the ability of wild-type CREB to mediate induction by protein kinase-A of a SS CRE reporter gene in F9 teratocarcinoma cells. We have used this mutant to analyze the participation of CREB in the induction of the SS promoter in CA-77 cells, a medullary thyroid carcinoma cell line that produces high levels of SS. Although KCREB can block a portion of the cAMP induction of the SS promoter in CA-77 cells, approximately 45% of the induction remains insensitive to the mutant. These data support the paradigm that CREB is involved in the cAMP induction of SS in vivo. Furthermore, the inability of KCREB to completely block cAMP-mediated SS expression in CA-77 cells suggests that additional factors may contribute to the cAMP regulation of CRE function.
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PMID:A dominant repressor of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP)-regulated enhancer-binding protein activity inhibits the cAMP-mediated induction of the somatostatin promoter in vivo. 135 57

The expression of the genes encoding the hormones glucagon, insulin, somatostatin, and pancreatic polypeptide in the endocrine islets of the pancreas is regulated in a cell-specific manner, defining four distinct cellular phenotypes (A-, B-, D-, and F-cells, respectively). Binding of nuclear proteins to cognate DNA sequences within cis-acting regulatory elements mediates the transcriptional events that result in the cell-specific activation or repression of gene expression. In a parallel study, we describe the functional properties of the SMS-UE, a pancreatic islet D-cell specific enhancer element that regulates the expression of the somatostatin gene and contains two interdependent domains, A and B. In the studies described herein, we have characterized the nuclear proteins that recognize the SMS-UE. Domain A of the SMS-UE is a DNA enhancer sequence that is identical to that bound by the ubiquitously distributed CCAAT box-binding protein alpha-CBF, a transcription factor that regulates the expression of the human chorionic gonadotrophin alpha-subunit gene. The B-domain, on the other hand, binds an islet cell-specific protein with characteristics similar to those of Isl-1, a transcriptional activator protein that binds to the E2 enhancer of the rat insulin-1 gene. In addition, the SMS-UE binds transcription factor CREB but not CREM, the close homolog of CREB, on a site adjacent to, or overlapping, the 3' end of domain B. We show that the carboxyl-terminal bZIP domain of CREB binds to the cAMP response element of the somatostatin gene but is not sufficient for binding to the SMS-UE, and we present evidence suggesting that CREB.SMS-UE binding requires stabilization by a region of the protein located within the transactivation domain.
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PMID:Somatostatin gene upstream enhancer element activated by a protein complex consisting of CREB, Isl-1-like, and alpha-CBF-like transcription factors. 135 92

We have examined the mechanism by which the transcriptional activity of the cAMP-responsive factor CREB is attenuated following induction with forskolin. Metabolic labeling studies reveal that, after an initial burst of phosphorylation in response to cAMP, CREB is dephosphorylated and transcription of the cAMP-responsive somatostatin gene is correspondingly reduced. The phosphatase inhibitor 1 protein and okadaic acid both prevented the dephosphorylation of CREB at Ser-133 in PC12 cells and also augmented the transcriptional response to cAMP. Of the four Ser/Thr phosphatases described to date, only PP-1 appears to be similarly inhibited by these agents. As PP-1 specifically dephosphorylates CREB at Ser-133 and inhibits cAMP-dependent transcription, we propose that this phosphatase is the major regulator of CREB activity in cAMP-responsive cells.
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PMID:Transcriptional attenuation following cAMP induction requires PP-1-mediated dephosphorylation of CREB. 135 81

Many eukaryotic genes are regulated by cAMP through a conserved cAMP response element (CRE). Here we show that, in the pancreatic islet cell line Tu6, a well-characterized CRE in the somatostatin gene does not provide cAMP responsiveness but functions as an essential element for its basal activity. DNA-binding and functional analyses indicate that the cAMP-responsive factor CREB regulates somatostatin expression in these cells without requirement for phosphorylation at the protein kinase A-regulated Ser-133 phosphorylation site. In addition to the CRE site, cell-specific expression of the somatostatin gene requires a second promoter element, which binds the recently characterized LIM family protein Isl-1. Thus, Isl-1 and CREB appear to synergize on the somatostatin promoter to stimulate high-level expression in Tu6 cells. The ability of CREB to function in a phosphorylation-independent manner suggests a mechanism by which this protein can regulate gene transcription.
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PMID:The LIM family transcription factor Isl-1 requires cAMP response element binding protein to promote somatostatin expression in pancreatic islet cells. 135 85

Transcription of the ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) gene is rapidly elevated by activation of protein kinase A (PKA). The additive influence of three cis-acting elements is responsible for this regulation in an adrenal carcinoma cell line. Two sites, CRE2 at -48 base pairs (bp) relative to the start of transcription and CRE3 at +95 bp, are identical to the core motif of the cAMP-responsive element (CRE) of the somatostatin gene and are conserved in the mouse, rat, and human ODC genes. Mutation of CRE2 resulted in a substantial decrease in basal promoter activity, as well as a 5-fold decrease in inducibility of the ODC promoter by PKA. CRE3 did not contribute to the basal activity of the ODC promoter, but mutation of this site resulted in a 2-fold decrease in inducibility by PKA. Deletion of a 45-bp sequence (GC-box) located 5' of CRE2, also resulted in a 2-fold decrease in inducibility of the ODC promoter. DNase I protection revealed the presence of protein binding at CRE2, the TATA box, and the GC-box of the ODC promoter. Mutation of CRE2 resulted in loss of protection of this sequence, as well as the 3' extension of the footprint over the TATA box, without affecting interactions at the GC box. Antibodies to the well characterized CRE-binding protein CREB recognized proteins binding to CRE2, suggesting that binding of CREB, or an antigenically related protein, is important for the activity of CRE2. Additionally, recombinant CREB bound to a DNA probe containing the CRE2 sequence.
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PMID:Multiple DNA elements responsible for transcriptional regulation of the ornithine decarboxylase gene by protein kinase A. 135 8

In this report, we describe the isolation and initial characterization of a Drosophila protein, dCREB-A, that can bind the somatostatin cyclic AMP (cAMP)-responsive element and is capable of activating transcription in cell culture. Sequence analysis demonstrates that this protein is a member of the leucine zipper family of transcription factors. dCREB-A is unusual in that it contains six hydrophobic residue iterations in the zipper domain rather than the four or five commonly found in this group of proteins. The DNA-binding domain is more closely related to mammalian CREB than to the AP-1 factors in both sequence homology and specificity of cAMP-responsive element binding. In embryos, dCREB-A is expressed in the developing salivary gland. A more complex pattern of expression is detected in the adult; transcripts are found in the brain and optic lobe cell bodies, salivary gland, and midgut epithelial cells of the cardia. In females, dCREB-A is expressed in the ovarian columnar follicle cells, and in males, dCREB-A RNA is seen in the seminal vesicle, ejaculatory duct, and ejaculatory bulb. These results suggest that the dCREB-A transcription factor may be involved in fertility and neurological functions.
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PMID:A cyclic AMP-responsive element-binding transcriptional activator in Drosophila melanogaster, dCREB-A, is a member of the leucine zipper family. 150 8

To evaluate the function of the murine ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) gene promoter, expression of chimeric ODC-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) plasmids (pODCcat) containing 1,658 nt of the ODC promoter sequence and its various 5'-deletions was analyzed. In transient expression assays with NIH/3T3 mouse cells, pODCcat constructs exhibited fairly strong promoter activity yielding CAT values up to 40% of those obtained with the viral promoter RSV. Interestingly, 5'-deletions of the pODCcat constructs increased the promoter activity over that achieved using the entire 1.6-kb 5'-flanking region, with the highest activity being observed with about 750 nt of the ODC promoter. This finding suggests that the distal part of the promoter includes DNA elements which are involved in repressing its function. The promoter region could be deleted down to the proximal 97 nt and still be stimulated by cAMP to the same extent as the 1.6-kb promoter. DNase I footprinting and methylation interference studies showed that a specific protein binds to the region from -59 to -39, which encompasses a DNA motif resembling the consensus cyclic AMP response element (CRE). However, comparative gel retardation and Southwestern blotting experiments with the putative ODC-CRE and the somatostatin promoter CRE indicated that the 70-kDa protein interacting with the CRE-like element of the ODC promoter is different from the well-characterized nuclear CRE-binding protein CREB.
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PMID:Protein-DNA interactions in the cAMP responsive promoter region of the murine ornithine decarboxylase gene. 165 Apr 55

We applied Southwestern and Western blotting and gel retardation techniques to investigate the changes that occur in the cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)-responsive element (CRE) binding (CREB) proteins in rapidly growing, chemically induced 5123tc and 5123D Morris hepatomas. Using the CRE sequences from the c-fos, E2A, and somatostatin gene promoters, we identified in the nuclear proteins from normal unstimulated or proliferating rat liver cells six different protein factors of Mr 34,000, 36,000, 40,000, 47,000, 56,000, and 72,000 capable of binding to the element. The Mr 47,000 protein had the highest specificity for the core CRE, suggesting its importance in cAMP-mediated gene expression. We could not find the Mr 47,000 CREB protein in the 5123tc and 5123D hepatomas. Our efforts to detect this protein in the tumors by (a) using the CRE sequence from different gene promoters, (b) altering the protocol for extracting nuclear proteins, or (c) attempting to restore its DNA-binding property by phosphorylation [with endogenous protein kinase(s), a catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and protein kinase C/dephosphorylation (with alkaline phosphatase)] were unsuccessful. The loss of tje Mr 47,000 CREB protein from solid tumors of the Morris hepatoma is likely to be related to the neoplastic properties of the tumor cell rather than to cell growth because the level of this protein remained unchanged during a 6-day period of liver regeneration. The nuclear extract from the Morris hepatoma that did not have the Mr 47,000 CRE-binding factor contained proteins immunologically related to the CREB, c-Jun, and c-Fos proteins. We conclude that the Mr 47,000 factor represents a distinct member of the CRE-binding protein family and that its absence from the hepatomas may lead to aberrant expression of cAMP-inducible genes.
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PMID:Changes in cyclic adenosine monophosphate-responsive element binding proteins in rat hepatomas. 182 83

The mammalian DNA repair enzyme beta-polymerase is encoded by a single-copy gene that is expressed in all tissues and cell lines studied to date. A protein fraction with high binding affinity for an ATF/CREB-like binding element, GTGACGTCAC, at -49 to -40 in the core beta-polymerase promoter has been purified to near-homogeneity from a nuclear extract of bovine testes. The major binding activity, as monitored by gel mobility shift assay, is recovered in 20% yield by a procedure involving oligonucleotide affinity chromatography. The purified protein yields DNase I footprinting and gel shift binding patterns indistinguishable from the activity in crude extracts. The final fraction activates transcription in an in vitro transcription reaction. The native molecular weight of the purified binding activity is about 100-120K as measured by gel filtration. SDS-PAGE of the purified fraction revealed that it contains several polypeptides in the molecular weight range of 30-52K, yet two of these peptides (Mr 49K and 52K) are predominant. Specific binding to the palindrome is salt-sensitive and is consistent with the formation of nine ion pairs (from log KA vs log KCl plots) and has a KA at 200 mM KCl of 5.8 X 10(11) M-1. Kinetic studies with synthetic oligonucleotides as binding ligands indicate that the purified protein can bind tighter to or discriminate between the beta-polymerase ATF/CREB element and similar elements derived from somatostatin and chorionic gonadotropin genes.
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PMID:Mammalian beta-polymerase promoter: large-scale purification and properties of ATF/CREB palindrome binding protein from bovine testes. 182 81

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.
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PMID:Characterization of three different elements in the 5'-flanking region of the fibronectin gene which mediate a transcriptional response to cAMP. 184 87


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