Department of Pharmacology, University of
Wisconsin Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin
53706,1 and Howard Hughes Medical
Institute, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of
Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 803092
Activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway
enhances long-range transactivation by the
-globin locus control
region (LCR) (W. K. Versaw, V. Blank, N. M. Andrews, and E. H. Bresnick, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 95:8756-8760, 1998). The enhancement requires tandem recognition sites for the hematopoietic transcription factor NF-E2 within the hypersensitive site 2 (HS2) subregion of the LCR. To distinguish between mechanisms of induction involving the activation of silent promoters or the increased efficacy
of active promoters, we analyzed basal and MAPK-stimulated HS2 enhancer
activity in single, living cells. K562 erythroleukemia cells stably
transfected with constructs containing the human A
-globin promoter
linked to an enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) reporter, with
or without HS2, were analyzed for EGFP expression by flow cytometry.
When most cells in a population expressed EGFP, MAPK augmented the
activity of active promoters. However, under conditions of silencing,
in which cells reverted to a state with no measurable EGFP expression,
MAPK activated silent promoters. Furthermore, studies of populations of
EGFP-expressing and non-EGFP-expressing cells isolated by flow
cytometry showed that MAPK activation converted nonexpressing cells
into expressing cells and increased expression in expressing cells.
These results support a model in which MAPK elicits both graded and
stochastic responses to increase HS2-mediated transactivation from
single chromatin templates.
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INTRODUCTION |
Transcription of the
-globin
genes is regulated by four erythroid-cell-specific
DNaseI-hypersensitive sites (HSs) at the 5' end of the
-globin locus
(12, 46), termed the locus control region (LCR)
(16). Although the HSs function together to confer long-range transactivation in transfection assays (5) and
transgenic mice (7), HS2 and HS3, individually, have strong
erythroid-cell-specific enhancer activity when positioned near a
promoter (9, 18, 20, 27, 29, 38, 41, 44). Recently, we
reported that LCR-mediated transactivation in stable transfection
assays increased upon activation of the mitogen-activated protein
kinase (MAPK) signaling pathway (48). The MAPK-dependent
stimulation required HS2 and was independent of the distance between
HS2 and the promoter. Tandem recognition sites within HS2 for the
erythroid-cell- and megakaryocyte-specific transcription factor NF-E2
(1, 33, 37), which are critical for strong enhancer
activity, were necessary for induction. Besides the requirement of
NF-E2 sites, expression of tethered NF-E2, with covalently linked p45
and p18 subunits, conferred induction in CB3 erythroleukemia cells
(30) that lack NF-E2. We postulated that phosphorylation of
NF-E2 facilitates the recruitment of a coactivator that partially
overcomes a limitation to long-range activation (48).
Enhancement of NF-E2-mediated transactivation by MAPK with synthetic
promoter constructs in transient expression assays has also been
described (36).
Two simple mechanisms could explain the MAPK-dependent stimulation of
HS2 enhancer activity. First, MAPK may enhance the formation of
transcription complexes on inactive promoters. Alternatively, MAPK may
augment the activity of preassembled complexes. To distinguish between
these possibilities, we established a system for assaying gene
expression in single, living cells using cell lines containing integrated constructs with the enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) reporter gene.
Gene expression can be quantitatively assayed in single cells with
-galactosidase or GFP reporter genes and flow cytometric analysis.
Studies on the mechanism of enhancer action in single cells have found
that enhancers act via a stochastic or binary mechanism to increase the
probability of gene expression from a given template (11, 15, 24,
32, 40, 43, 50, 53). Accordingly, the enhancer determines whether
the promoter will be active or inactive rather than augmenting the
efficacy of an active promoter. Thus, there are three possible activity
states in a diploid cell, each characterized by either two inactive
alleles, one active allele, or two active alleles. Stochastic behavior can be explained by the enhancer-dependent, all-or-none recruitment of
the RNA polymerase II holoenzyme (45) to an inactive
promoter. As the positioning of a nucleosome on a promoter can occlude
cis-acting elements (26, 49), the chromatin could
prevent initiation complex assembly and thus maintain the silent state.
A signaling pathway that targets an enhancer binding factor could
regulate its ability to engage in protein-protein interactions
necessary for the assembly of the enhancer complex. Only when the
complete complex is assembled, which can be an all-or-none event
(4), would the chromatin be disrupted, allowing for
holoenzyme recruitment.
The alternative graded mechanism (23), involving the
augmented efficacy of active promoters, would result from a factor modification that modulates the activity of the enhancer complex rather
than the all-or-none complex assembly. Based on the importance of
coactivators in transactivation (19), the modification may increase the efficiency of coactivator recruitment and thus increase promoter activity. Although activation may involve exclusively stochastic or graded responses, certain mechanisms may elicit both
responses. For example, coactivators that modify chromatin structure to
control DNA accessibility could influence both initiation complex
assembly and the activity of preassembled complexes. Here, we describe
the influence of MAPK on HS2 enhancer activity in single,
living cells. Increased enhancer activity is manifested as both
graded and stochastic responses, and the implications of this are
discussed with respect to a model for HS2-mediated long-range transactivation.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plasmid construction.
The
KpnI-HindIII multiple cloning site of
plasmid pGFPemd-Basic (Packard) was replaced with the 390-bp
KpnI-HindIII fragment of pGL3RI
luc
(5), which contains the multiple cloning site and the human
A
-globin promoter (
299 to +35), to yield p
EGFP. The 1,460-bp
KpnI fragment of pHS2
luc (5) containing human HS2 was subcloned into p
EGFP to yield pHS2
EGFP. To physically separate HS2 from the promoter, phage
DNA fragments (either 2.2 kb
or one each of 2.4 and 5.1 kb) were subcloned into the MluI
site of pHS2
EGFP to yield pHS2(2.2)
EGFP and pHS2(7.5)
EGFP. The
1,950-bp KpnI-EcoRI fragment of pHS3
luc
(5) containing human HS3 was subcloned into p
EGFP to
yield pHS3
EGFP. The expression vector encoding constitutively active
human MEK1/R4F (cMEK1) was described previously (54).
Cell culture.
The human erythroleukemia cell line K562 was
propagated in Iscove's modified Eagle's medium (IMEM; Biofluids)
containing gentamicin (25 µg/ml) and 10% fetal calf serum
(Gibco-BRL). Cell lines were grown in a humidified incubator at 37°C
in the presence of 5% carbon dioxide. The cell density was maintained
between approximately 1 × 105/ml and 8 × 105/ml. Stably transfected clones of K562 cells were
selected and maintained in the presence of hygromycin B (0.2 and
0.1 mg/ml; Sigma) as described previously (5, 25).
Flow cytometric analysis.
Cells (2 × 105)
were isolated by centrifugation at 240 × g for 5 min
at 4°C, washed by resuspension in 1 ml of phosphate-buffered saline,
and recentrifuged. Washed cells were resuspended in phosphate-buffered saline and 1% bovine serum albumin and then analyzed for EGFP fluorescence by using a FACScan flow cytometer and CellQuest software (Becton Dickinson). Propidium iodide (0.3 µg/ml) was added to restrict the analysis to live cells. Untransfected K562 cells were used
to define nonexpressing cells. The EGFP fluorescence of uninduced and
tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate (TPA)-induced samples of a given clone
(see Tables 1 and 2) were measured at the same time with identical
instrument settings, and they are directly comparable. In contrast,
mean fluorescence values for different clones are not directly
comparable, due to variations in gating between measurements made on
different days and the different instrument settings required for
optimal peak resolution.
In the experiment shown in Fig. 6, HS2
EGFP-1 was grown without
hygromycin for 133 and 135 days and then sorted into EGFP-expressing and non-EGFP-expressing cells with a FACStar-plus instrument (Becton Dickinson). Replicate aliquots (4 × 105) of sorted
cells were treated with 5 nM TPA or vehicle for 20 h, and then
EGFP fluorescence was measured by flow cytometric analysis.
Reporter assays.
For the detection of EGFP in cell lysates,
2 × 105 cells were harvested by centrifugation at
240 × g for 5 min at 4°C. Cells were lysed by adding
100 µl of lysis buffer (Promega), incubating for 15 min at room
temperature, and then centrifuging at 18,700 × g for 2 min at 4°C. Aliquots of cell lysate (5 to 20 µl) were added to 1 ml
of 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0)-1 mM EDTA, and the relative fluorescence
was measured with a SLM 8000C spectrofluorometer. The excitation and
emission settings were 484 nm and 508 nm, respectively, and the
band-pass was set to 4 nm. The amount of EGFP in each sample was
determined with a standard curve of recombinant EGFP (Clontech). EGFP
values were normalized by protein concentration and, in certain cases,
by the copy number of the integrated construct as determined by
Southern blot analysis. The protein concentration was estimated by
using the Bradford assay with
-globulin as a standard. As the EGFP
levels in cell lysates were determined with a standard curve of
purified EGFP, values for lysates from different clonal lines are
directly comparable. The TPA induction was consistently lower when
calculated from measurements of EGFP in lysates than when calculated by
flow cytometric analysis. This is likely related to the fact that the
flow cytometric assay measured EGFP expression in only living cells.
Transient transfections.
Clonal lines containing stably
integrated EGFP reporter genes were transiently transfected with a
constitutive expression vector encoding enhanced blue fluorescent
protein (EBFP) (Clontech) and either a plasmid encoding cMEK1 or the
empty vector pcDNA3 (Invitrogen). EBFP was used as a marker for
transfection, allowing us to test the influence of transiently
expressed cMEK1 on the activity of the stably integrated EGFP reporter
gene. A 3:1 ratio of cMEK1 or pcDNA3 to EBFP was used to increase the
probability that EBFP-positive cells contained cMEK1 or pcDNA3. Cells
(5 × 105) were collected by centrifugation at
240 × g for 5 min at 4°C, resuspended in 0.5 ml of
IMEM containing 10% fetal calf serum and gentamicin (25 µg/ml), and
mixed with 3.5 ml of identical medium in each well of a six-well plate.
Plasmid DNA (6 µg in 150 µl of IMEM) was incubated with 24 µl of Superfect transfection reagent (Qiagen) for 15 min at room
temperature and then added to cells. Cells were incubated for 48 h, harvested, and then subjected to flow cytometric analysis with a
FACStar-plus instrument as described above.
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RESULTS |
TPA treatment stimulates HS2 enhancer activity by increasing the
efficacy of active promoters.
To determine whether the stimulation
of HS2 enhancer activity by TPA occurs via the facilitated assembly of
transcription complexes on inactive promoters or the augmented efficacy
of active promoters, we generated stably transfected clonal cell lines
containing EGFP reporter constructs. The constructs consisted of a
human A
-globin promoter linked to EGFP, with or without HS2 or HS3. We measured EGFP expression in several clonal lines containing each
construct by flow cytometric and fluorometric analyses.
Clonal cell lines containing the A
-globin promoter alone showed
considerable variability in EGFP expression between clones and between
cells of the same clone. The percentage of EGFP-positive cells averaged
58.5% ± 35.7% (mean ± standard error, n = 3)
(Fig. 1 and Table
1). The variability is consistent with
the expected strong influence of chromosomal position on the promoter.
The activation of MAPK in K562 cells is routinely done by treatment with the protein kinase C (PKC) activator TPA (39, 54).
Paradoxically, MAPK activation can result in either the erythroid or
megakaryocytic differentiation of K562 cells depending on the TPA
concentration and the length of incubation. As reported previously
(48), treatment with 5 nM TPA for 20 h did not
influence the morphology of our K562 clonal lines. TPA did not increase
EGFP expression from the promoter-only constructs, regardless of
whether the basal activity was high or low (ratio of induced cells to
uninduced cells [herein referred to as "induced/uninduced
ratio"] = 0.74 ± 0.19, n = 3). (Fig. 1 and
Table 1).

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FIG. 1.
TPA induction of HS2 enhancer activity analyzed in
single cells. Cultures were treated with 5 nM TPA (shaded) or vehicle
(unshaded) for 20 h before each analysis. Histograms show
representative flow cytometric analyses of stably transfected K562
clonal cell lines containing EGFP, HS2 EGFP, or HS3 EGFP
constructs. The number of integrated copies of the reporter plasmid is
shown. Nonexpressing cells had a relative fluorescence of no more than
1 on this scale.
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In contrast to the promoter-only constructs, EGFP expression by all
constructs containing HS2 was induced by TPA (Fig. 1 and Table 1). Cell
lines containing HS2 near the promoter (20 bp) showed very little
variability in the percentage of EGFP-positive cells (99.8 ± 0.03%, n = 7) (Fig. 1 and Table 1). However, the level
of expression per copy was quite variable, consistent with data showing
that HS2 inefficiently overcomes position effects (5). In
all cases, TPA treatment increased EGFP expression. Considering that
nearly all cells expressed EGFP in the basal state, it can be inferred
that this increase resulted from augmented expression in expressing
cells. The TPA induction (induced/uninduced ratio = 1.49 ± 0.16, n = 7) averaged less than the two- to sixfold reported previously for clones containing constructs with luciferase reporter genes. This is likely related to the fact that EGFP has a
half-life greater than 24 h (55); preexisting EGFP
would have diluted the pool of newly synthesized EGFP, resulting in a
lower apparent induction. Nevertheless, the induction was reproducible and observed in all cell lines containing constructs with integrated HS2.
Previously, we reported that the stimulation of LCR enhancer activity
by TPA in stable transfection assays requires HS2 (48). As
HS3 also has erythroid-cell-specific enhancer activity and could not
mediate the response, this finding was inconsistent with a general
facilitation of enhancer function. To determine whether the HS2
specificity was also evident at the single-cell level, we analyzed EGFP
expression in cell lines containing constructs with HS3 (Fig. 1 and
Table 1). The percentage of EGFP-positive cells was very high (99.4% ± 0.39%, n = 6). In contrast to constructs containing
HS2, TPA treatment did not influence EGFP expression (induced/uninduced
ratio = 0.92 ± 0.03, n = 6), consistent with previous studies of luciferase reporter constructs (48).
The tandem NF-E2 binding sites within HS2 are necessary for the
stimulation of HS2 enhancer activity by TPA in stably transfected pools
of K562 cells (48). To assess the importance of the NF-E2 sites at the single-cell level, we generated K562 clonal cell lines
containing an NF-E2 site deletion mutant of HS2 and tested these cells
for inducibility by TPA. The percentage of EGFP-positive cells in these
clonal lines was high (93.3% ± 2.9%, n = 9). Five clones failed to respond to TPA treatment, whereas induction was measured in four clones by flow cytometric analysis (induced/uninduced ratio = 1.2 ± 0.05, n = 9). Thus, in
agreement with our previous studies with luciferase-based constructs in
stably transfected pools of K562 cells, the NF-E2 sites are important
to ensure induction at any integration site.
Although HS2 is a strong enhancer when positioned near (2 to 3 kb) an
A
-globin promoter in stable transfection assays, the enhancer
activity is strongly distance dependent (5). However, the
stimulation of HS2 enhancer activity by TPA is evident when HS2 was
positioned either 2.2 or 7.3 kb from an A
-globin promoter, suggesting that the induction is distance independent (48). To assess the impact of HS2-promoter distance and the consequences of
TPA treatment at the single-cell level, we generated clonal lines
containing HS2 positioned 2.2 or 7.5 kb upstream of an A
-globin promoter linked to an EGFP reporter gene. Similar to lines containing HS2 positioned 20 bp from the promoter, the percentage of EGFP-positive cells was very high (89.9% ± 13.1%, n = 7) when HS2
was 2.2 kb from the promoter (Fig. 2 and
Table 2). TPA treatment enhanced EGFP
expression in all lines (induced/uninduced ratio = 3.43 ± 0.86, n = 7) (Fig. 2 and Table 2). Cell lines
containing HS2 positioned 7.5 kb upstream of the promoter showed
greater variability in EGFP expression between different clones and
between cells of the same clone (59.0% ± 24.2%, n = 4) (Fig. 2 and Table 2). However, TPA treatment increased EGFP
expression in all lines (induced/uninduced ratio = 1.86 ± 0.29, n = 4), similar to previous results with
luciferase constructs (48). Importantly, several lines
[HS2(2.2)
EGFP-6 and -8 and HS2(7.5)
EGFP-1, -3, and -4] contained a single copy of the integrated construct, and these lines
did not obviously differ in expression or inducibility from lines
containing multiple copies.

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FIG. 2.
Distance independence of TPA-induced HS2 enhancer
activity. Cultures were treated with 5 nM TPA (shaded) or vehicle
(unshaded) for 20 h before each analysis. Histograms show
representative flow cytometric analyses of stably transfected K562
clonal cell lines containing HS2(2.2) EGFP or HS2(7.5) EGFP
constructs. The number of integrated copies of the reporter plasmid is
shown. Nonexpressing cells had a relative fluorescence of no more than
1 on this scale.
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TABLE 2.
Influence of HS2-promoter distance and TPA treatment on
EGFP expression in stably transfected K562 clonal lines
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In the experiments described above, TPA treatment increased EGFP
expression in active cells (Fig. 1 and 2 and Tables 1 and 2), and
in certain cases [e.g., HS2(7.5)
EGFP-2] (Fig. 2 and Table 2) it
increased the percentage of expressing cells. Based on previous
observations that stably transfected lines grown without a selecting
antibiotic silence integrated constructs (50, 51), we
examined the influence of silencing on TPA-induced HS2 enhancer activity.
Graded and stochastic changes in gene expression induced by
MAPK.
We routinely generate stably transfected clonal K562 cell
lines by cotransfecting a linearized luciferase or EGFP reporter construct with a selection construct containing a thymidine kinase promoter controlling a hygromycin resistance gene. These cell lines are
grown in the presence of hygromycin to reduce the probability of gene
silencing. In related systems, the expression of integrated genes is
silenced, in a time-dependent fashion, upon withdrawal of the selecting
antibiotic (50, 51). We have asked whether growing cells
without hygromycin results in the silencing of EGFP-expressing clones
and whether silencing precludes the TPA induction of HS2 enhancer activity.
The HS2
EGFP-1 cell line was grown for up to 78 days without
hygromycin. At various times, EGFP expression was measured by flow
cytometric analysis and fluorometry. In the presence of hygromycin, nearly all cells expressed EGFP and the percentage of EGFP-positive cells remained relatively constant with time (Fig. 3A and
B). As was observed previously in Fig. 1
and 2, TPA treatment increased EGFP expression in expressing cells. In
contrast, the growth of cells without hygromycin resulted in a
time-dependent decrease in the percentage of EGFP-positive cells (Fig.
3B) and in EGFP levels in cell lysates (Fig. 3C). Under these
conditions, TPA treatment resulted in a higher percentage of
EGFP-positive cells (Fig. 3B) and increased EGFP levels in cell lysates
(Fig. 3C).

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FIG. 3.
Silencing of EGFP expression reveals stochastic and
graded responses to TPA treatment. Clone HS2 EGFP-1 was grown for the
indicated times with or without hygromycin (hygro) and then treated
with 5 nM TPA (shaded) or vehicle (unshaded) for 20 h before each
analysis. (A) Flow cytometric analysis was used to measure the
percentage of EGFP-positive cells in the viable cell population. (B)
The percentage of EGFP-positive cells determined in panel A is
expressed as a function of culture time. (C) EGFP was quantitated in
cell lysates by fluorometry and normalized by protein concentration and
copy number of the integrated reporter construct.
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To assess whether the results with clone HS2
EGFP-1 were
representative of any HS2-containing clonal line, we also
measured EGFP expression in clone HS2(2.2)
EGFP-3 (Fig.
4) the single-copy clones
HS2(2.2)
EGFP-6 and -8 (data not shown) and in clone
HS2(7.5)
EGFP-4 (Fig. 5) after growth
with or without hygromycin for up to 54 days. Nearly all
HS2(2.2)
EGFP-3 cells (96.0%) expressed EGFP when grown in media
containing hygromycin (Fig. 4); in contrast, the percentage of
EGFP-positive cells of this clone decreased to 18.8% after growth for
26 days without hygromycin. TPA treatment increased the percentage of
expressing cells from 18.8% to 50.3%. Importantly, cell lines
containing single copies of the reporter gene behaved similarly. In the
presence of hygromycin, the percentage of expressing cells remained
high, and TPA treatment increased the level of expression from active
templates. Withdrawal of hygromycin resulted in the silencing of EGFP
expression, and TPA treatment increased the percentage of expressing
cells up to 2.5-fold (Fig. 5). Thus, the conditions of gene silencing
reveal a stochastic component of the mechanism of TPA-induced
transactivation besides the graded-response characteristic of cell
populations in which most cells express EGFP in the basal state.

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FIG. 4.
Silencing of EGFP expression in clone HS2(2.2) EGFP-3.
The clone was grown for 26 days with or without hygromycin (hygro) and
then treated with 5 nM TPA (shaded) or vehicle (unshaded) for 20 h
before each analysis. The percentage of EGFP-positive cells in the
viable cell population was measured by flow cytometric analysis. EGFP
was quantitated in cell lysates by fluorometry and normalized by
protein concentration and the copy number of the integrated reporter
construct.
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FIG. 5.
Silencing of EGFP expression in single-copy clone
HS2(7.5) EGFP-4. The clone was grown for 26 or 36 days with or
without hygromycin (hygro) and then treated with 5 nM TPA (shaded) or
vehicle (unshaded) for 20 h before each analysis. The percentage
of EGFP-positive cells in the viable cell population was measured by
flow cytometric analysis. EGFP was quantitated in cell lysates by
fluorometry and normalized by protein concentration and the copy number
of the integrated reporter construct.
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To further confirm that TPA treatment can exert both graded
and stochastic effects on gene expression, we physically separated EGFP-expressing and non-EGFP-expressing cells (HS2
EGFP-1) by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) (Fig.
6). We used cells grown for 133 and 135 days without hygromycin so that adequate numbers of expressing and
nonexpressing cells could be isolated. Sorted pools of expressing and
nonexpressing cells were treated with TPA, and then EGFP expression was
analyzed by flow cytometry. TPA treatment resulted in the conversion of
nonexpressing cells to expressing cells (15.5-fold increase) and in
increased expression by expressing cells (19.5-fold increase). These
results support the conclusion from the silencing experiments that TPA
treatment elicits both graded and stochastic changes in gene
expression.

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FIG. 6.
Physical separation of EGFP-expressing and
non-EGFP-expressing cells revealed both stochastic and graded responses
to TPA treatment. Clone HS2 EGFP-1 was grown without hygromycin for
133 or 135 days and then sorted by FACS into EGFP-expressing and
non-EGFP-expressing pools. Pools were treated with 5 nM TPA (shaded) or
vehicle (unshaded) for 20 h, and then the percentage of
EGFP-positive cells and the mean fluorescence of viable cells were
measured by flow cytometric analysis. Representative flow cytometric
profiles are shown. The horizontal line represents the EGFP-expressing
cells. The values represent the means of two independent experiments in
which cells were grown for either 133 or 135 days without hygromycin.
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Direct activation of MAPK with cMEK1 elicits graded and stochastic
changes in gene expression.
We routinely activate MAPK indirectly
with the PKC agonist TPA. Previously, we showed that the MEK1 inhibitor
PD98059 prevented TPA induction of luciferase mRNA from a stably
integrated HS2
-luciferase construct (48), consistent with
a role for MAPK in the response. However, PKC activation can have
multiple effects on cells, which may be MAPK dependent or independent.
Thus, we asked whether direct activation of MAPK via expression of
cMEK1 mimics the effect of TPA on EGFP expression.
cMEK1 was transiently expressed in clones
EGFP-1 and -4 and HS2(2.2)
EGFP-3 grown with hygromycin and in HS2
EGFP-1
grown with and without hygromycin (at least 125 days). An expression vector encoding EBFP was cotransfected with the cMEK1 vector so that
transfected cells could be identified by flow cytometric analysis. Figure 7 shows the flow
cytometric detection of blue and green fluorescence after the
transfection of control K562 cells and HS2
EGFP-1 with EBFP or
EGFP expression vectors. Expression of the integrated EGFP reporter
gene was analyzed in EBFP-positive cells. cMEK1 expression in clones
EGFP-1 and -4 did not influence EGFP expression (Table
3), consistent with the nonresponsiveness of these clones to TPA. In contrast, expression of cMEK1 in the clones
containing constructs with HS2 stimulated EGFP expression, similar to
expression after TPA treatment. Importantly, cMEK1 induced changes in
both the percentage of expressing cells and in the level of expression
per copy (Table 3).

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FIG. 7.
Expression of cMEK1 elicits graded and stochastic
effects on gene expression. K562 cells were transiently transfected
with either constitutive EGFP or EBFP expression vectors to establish
conditions for discriminating between green and blue fluorescence.
Clone HS2 EGFP-1, grown in media containing hygromycin, was
transiently transfected with either EBFP and cMEK1 expression vectors
or EBFP and pcDNA3. EGFP expression was analyzed in EBFP-positive cells
(Table 3). Regions containing green, blue, and green plus blue cells
are delineated. The high level of EGFP expression in clone HS2 EGFP-1
resulted in an upward extension of the green signal. Note that the flow
cytometric data for cells transfected with cMEK1 and EBFP shows more
green and blue cells than data for cells transfected with pcDNA3 and
EBFP; this was not seen in all experiments and did not influence the
quantitation of green fluorescence in the cell population.
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DISCUSSION |
Regulation of LCR-mediated transactivation by MAPK.
We have
described herein the influence of the MAPK signaling pathway on
enhancer-mediated gene expression in single, living cells. Rather than
finding that MAPK influences gene expression in an exclusively
stochastic or graded manner, we have measured both stochastic and
graded responses, depending on the expression state of the integrated
constructs. The presence of hygromycin in the media maintained gene
expression for 78 days by ensuring that most cells in the population
expressed EGFP. Without hygromycin, silencing analogous to that
reported in related but distinct systems, which are discussed
below, occurred. TPA treatment or expression of cMEK1 could partially
reverse silencing through a stochastic mechanism. However, in
populations of predominantly expressing cells, TPA treatment or cMEK1
expression induced a graded response. As this is the first description
of the influence of a signaling pathway involving a kinase cascade on
enhancer-mediated gene expression at the single-cell level, it is
unclear whether this represents a typical or novel way of controlling
gene expression.
Several studies have evaluated the mechanism of enhancer function in
single cells (11, 15, 24, 32, 40, 43, 50, 53). Multiple
studies have shown that enhancers elicit stochastic effects on gene
expression. Weintraub reported that the simian virus 40 enhancer
facilitates the assembly of transcription complexes on inactive
promoters without stimulating active promoters (53). This
stochastic mechanism was also apparent in stably transfected cells
containing the glucocorticoid-responsive mouse mammary tumor virus
promoter linked to a lacZ reporter gene (24). The
dose-dependent glucocorticoid activation of the mouse mammary tumor
virus promoter caused the conversion of nonexpressing cells to
expressing cells without altering the activity of expressing cells.
Evidence for a stochastic mechanism of enhancer function has also come
from studies of gene silencing.
A powerful assay to study enhancer function takes advantage of the fact
that expression from integrated constructs containing a promoter linked
to a drug resistance gene is silenced when the cells are grown without
the selecting antibiotic. Martin and colleagues have used this system
to analyze the function of HS2 (50, 51), the
HS-40
enhancer from the
-globin locus (43), and the
metal-inducible metallothionein promoter (32) in single
cells. The enhancers were linked to a
-geo reporter gene
which confers
-galactosidase activity and hygromycin resistance.
Withdrawal of hygromycin from the medium resulted in the silencing of
stably transfected constructs, and enhancers decreased the rate of
silencing. Both the silencing and the enhancer activity suppressing
silencing were stochastic processes. However, metal induction of the
metallothionein promoter suppressed silencing and enhanced
transcription in expressing cells, suggesting that the two functions
were linked. A stochastic mechanism of HS2 enhancer function was also
described by Graubert et al. (15). An extensive analysis of
transgenic mice containing human HS2 linked to a fused
-globin
promoter/lacZ reporter gene showed that variable transgene
expression resulted from different numbers of expressing cells. In
contrast, a related study with the human
-globin LCR linked to a
-globin promoter/lacZ transgene found that variegation of
transgene expression resulted from a graded mechanism (17).
As there were technical differences between the studies, the basis for
opposite conclusions is unclear. Nevertheless, it is clear that
transactivation mechanisms in multiple systems can involve a stochastic
component. Lastly, Bouhassira et al. showed that single HSs of the LCR
elicit stochastic effects on promoter activity, whereas multiple HSs
increased promoter activity through a graded mechanism (3).
The studies described above have assessed basal enhancer function and
are therefore fundamentally different from our work in evaluating the
influences of signals that modulate enhancer activity.
Molecular basis of graded and stochastic transcriptional
responses.
An obvious question is whether distinct molecular
mechanisms confer exclusively stochastic or graded responses or
combined stochastic and graded responses. The activation of MAPK itself can be stochastic, which can lead to an all-or-none biological response, the maturation of Xenopus oocytes (10).
Another important parameter relevant to a stochastic mechanism is the
assembly of the enhancer complex, as the formation of a functional
enhancer can be an all-or-none process (4). Does
MAPK-mediated stimulation of HS2 enhancer activity result from the
facilitated assembly of the HS2 complex? If MAPK activation stimulates
the assembly of HS2 complexes, only a fraction of the templates would
be active in the basal state if promoter activity is absolutely
dependent on HS2. When HS2 is 20 bp or 2.2 kb from the promoter, most
of the cells in the population are active before induction. Under these
conditions, the MAPK response involves the increased efficacy of
preexisting HS2 complexes. A simple model to explain this graded response involves the phosphorylation of a component which increases the affinity of a coactivator for an LCR binding protein(s). The importance of the NF-E2 sites of HS2 to ensure a response at all integration sites may relate to the ability of NF-E2 to interact with
the coactivator cyclic AMP response element binding protein (CREB)
binding protein (CBP and its homolog p300) (8, 13). This may
be analogous to the PKA-mediated phosphorylation of CREB, which
increases the affinity of CREB for CBP/p300 (14, 35). CBP/p300 is believed to mediate transactivation through the acetylation of histone and nonhistone components.
The acetylation of amino-terminal tails of core histones is an
important chromatin modification involved in transcriptional regulation
(19). Histone acetylation increases the accessibility of DNA
in chromatin to transacting factors (26, 49) and thus would
be expected to influence multiple steps of transcription. Such a
chromatin modification could influence initiation complex assembly, promoter clearance, and elongation; these would be
manifested as both stochastic and graded effects on gene expression.
Histone acetyltransferases are recruited to genes through specific
protein-protein interactions with transcription factors (6,
47). Considering that CBP/p300 has been implicated as being
critical for strong HS2 enhancer activity (13) and that
CBP/p300 is phosphorylated directly by MAPKs, which increases its
transactivation properties when fused to GAL4 (21, 28), the
utilization of CBP/p300 by HS2 may be modulated by MAPK activation. The
importance of the NF-E2 sites for MAPK response is consistent with the
requirement of these sites for sensitivity to the CBP/p300 inhibitor
E1A (13).
Importance of MAPK signaling in erythropoiesis.
The MAPK
signaling pathway is one of several signaling pathways activated by
erythropoietin (2, 22, 34, 42), the polypeptide
hormone that drives erythropoiesis (52). As MAPK is an
important mediator of erythropoietin-stimulated erythroid cell
proliferation and differentiation in vivo (22), and
based on the influence of MAPK on LCR-mediated transactivation,
the LCR represents a potential MAPK target. Consistent with this, Nagai
et al. (36) used transient-transfection assays to provide evidence for a role of MAPK in regulating NF-E2-mediated
transactivation from synthetic promoter constructs. Dimethyl sulfoxide
induction of MEL cells resulted in increased NF-E2 transactivation
activity, and this response could be mimicked by activation of MAPK.
However, it is unclear whether this response resulted from the
phosphorylation of NF-E2 or another component by MAPK.
In contrast to the well-established erythropoietin-dependent
hemoglobinization of erythroid cells involving MAPK activation (52), the endogenous
-globin gene in K562 cells is
paradoxically repressed by TPA treatment (31). In addition,
-globin mRNA has a 3' element that can mediate RNA
destabilization upon the treatment of K562 cells with TPA
(31). Our previous Northern blot analysis of endogenous
-globin mRNA in K562 cells did not detect such a destabilization
upon TPA treatment (48), which may reflect our use of a
fourfold-lower concentration of TPA than in the study by Lumelsky and
Forget (31). Based on the erythropoietin-dependent MAPK
activation associated with erythropoiesis, it is unclear whether the
destabilization of
-globin mRNA induced by TPA is unique to certain
cell lines or stages of erythropoiesis.
How do our results on the regulation of HS2-mediated transactivation by
MAPK relate to the intact LCR? MAPK activation also enhances
transactivation mediated by the mini-LCR, which contains the four HSs,
showing that the signaling effect is not unique for HS2 alone
(48). MAPK-induced mini-LCR activity was apparent when the
mini-LCR was positioned 5.1 or 7.3 kb from an A
promoter but not
when it was placed 20 bp from the promoter, in which it had a very high
basal activity. This suggests that MAPK partially overcomes a
limitation to long-range activation. The identification of the target
of MAPK phosphorylation and the coactivator(s) that mediates the
response will be crucial for understanding the molecular basis of
how MAPK elicits graded and stochastic effects on gene expression from
single chromatin templates, which should be relevant to multiple
genes regulated by MAPK during cell growth and development.
We acknowledge support from the Milwaukee Foundation, the Leukemia
Society of America, the Hemophilia Association of New York (grant
133BK04), and the National Institutes of Health (grant DK50107).
E.H.B. is a Leukemia Society of America Scholar and a Shaw Scientist.
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