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Molecular and Cellular Biology, September 1999, p. 6120-6129, Vol. 19, No. 9
Department of Microbiology, Health Sciences
Center, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908
Received 10 February 1999/Returned for modification 29 March
1999/Accepted 14 June 1999
Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) has been implicated in cellular
processes that control cell adhesion, migration, cell cycle
progression, and apoptosis. FRNK (FAK-related nonkinase) is the
autonomously expressed, noncatalytic C-terminal portion of FAK. When
ectopically expressed in cells, FRNK has been shown to act as a
negative regulator of FAK activity, inhibiting cell spreading,
migration, and cell cycle progression. The mechanisms that regulate
FRNK expression during embryonic development and the functional role of
FRNK in normal cell homeostasis remain poorly understood. Herein we
show that FRNK expression in chicken cells is directed by an
alternative promoter residing within an intron of FAK, positioned 3' of
the exon encoding sequences for the catalytic domain and 5' of the exon
encoding sequences for the C-terminal domain of FAK (e.g., FRNK). Using
probes specific for FRNK, we show that FRNK expression occurs early in
chicken embryogenesis, being readily detected at day 3, 6, or 9. Late
in embryogenesis, at day 18, FRNK is expressed in a tissue-specific
manner, predominately in lung and intestine cells. Western blot
analysis of mouse tissues with a FAK-specific antibody revealed the
expression of FRNK in the mouse lung. Reverse transcriptase PCR
analysis of mouse lung RNA revealed the presence of spliced FRNK mRNAs
containing 5' untranslated sequences derived from a positionally
conserved exon present in the mouse genome. FAK is the first example of
a tyrosine kinase regulated by a domain under the control of an
alternative intronic promoter. It is also the first example of a focal
adhesion-associated protein regulated by such a mechanism and thus
represents a novel means for the modulation of cell adhesion signaling.
Cell adhesion to the extracellular
matrix (ECM) is vital for functional and structural integrity of cells
and tissues (15, 18). A primary mediator of cell-matrix
interactions is the integrin family of adhesion receptors (25, 26,
48). Integrin receptors are a family of transmembrane
glycoproteins consisting of individual alpha and beta subunits that
combine to form heterodimers with unique ECM specificities. The
extracellular portion of each heterodimer specifically engages one or
more ECM proteins, while the intracellular portion is coupled to the
actin cytoskeleton of the cell via cytoplasmic plaque proteins. In
adherent cells in culture, integrins are clustered at points of
cell-matrix contact known as focal adhesions (FAs) (5, 6).
Although points of cell-matrix contact in tissues are less prominent,
the structural components are the same, and thus FAs provide a valuable
model for studying cell-matrix adhesion. During morphogenesis,
cell-matrix interactions are dynamic. Likewise, as cells migrate in
culture, FAs are constantly turned over in order to allow cells to move
forward (30). De novo FAs form at the leading edge of the
cell as old FAs are broken down at the rear, with central FAs
presumably being the most stable. Thus, understanding the mechanisms by
which FAs are formed and subsequently broken down is essential to
understanding cell migration. These mechanisms remain elusive.
The clustering of integrins in response to cell adhesion, or by
cross-linking with antibodies, triggers actin stress fiber formation
and recruitment of cytoplasmic plaque proteins (31, 32). A
number of well-characterized cytoplasmic plaque proteins localize to
FAs, lending a complex architecture to these adhesive sites
(5). Some of these cytoplasmic plaque proteins, such as
vinculin, talin, and FAK is a nonreceptor protein tyrosine kinase that has been shown to be
one of the major signaling components of FAs (19, 38, 43,
45). FA formation triggers FAK autophosphorylation and
activation, leading to recruitment of SH2 and SH3 domain-containing kinases such as Src and Fyn (10, 53) and subsequent
phosphorylation of other cytoplasmic plaque proteins such as paxillin,
tensin, and p130CAS (28, 39, 40, 45).
These events are dependent upon FAK's ability to autophosphorylate on
Tyr 397, which in turn serves as a binding site for Src and/or Fyn
(7, 46). A second, truncated isoform of FAK has been
identified in a number of cell types and characterized. This
noncatalytic isoform, called FAK-related nonkinase (FRNK), is identical
in sequence to the C-terminal domain of FAK at both nucleotide and
amino acid levels (44). FRNK-specific cDNAs are
characterized by long 5'noncoding leader sequences (5' leader
sequences), indicating that expression of FRNK is mediated by
alternative splicing or transcription of FRNK-specific sequences (44).
The C-terminal domain of FAK, and therefore FRNK, contains binding
sites for several FA signaling proteins including the adapter proteins
p130CAS (20, 36, 37), Grb2
(47), paxillin (23), Graf (the GTPase regulator
associated with FAK) (24), and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase
(2, 8, 9, 17). The C-terminal domain also contains a
functional domain (focal adhesion targeting domain) that is necessary
and sufficient to target proteins to FAs (22). When
overexpressed in chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEF), FRNK acts as an
inhibitor of FAK activation (39). Phosphorylation of FAK itself is decreased, as is phosphorylation of at least two other FA-associated proteins, paxillin and tensin. FRNK-overexpressing cells
spread more slowly when plated on fibronectin (39, 40).
In this report we present evidence that FRNK expression is directed by
an alternative promoter residing within an intron of FAK positioned 3'
of the exon encoding sequences for the catalytic domain and 5' of the
exon encoding sequences for the C-terminal domain of FAK. FRNK
expression occurs early in chick embryogenesis, being readily detected
at days 3, 6 or 9. Late in embryogenesis, at day 18, FRNK is expressed
in a tissue-specific manner, predominately in cells of lung and
intestine. This differential regulation of FRNK in embryonic tissues
may play an important role in modulating FAK activity during
development. Western blot analysis of mouse tissues with a FAK-specific
antibody revealed the expression of FRNK in mouse lung. Reverse
transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) analysis of mouse lung RNA revealed the
presence of spliced FRNK mRNAs containing 5' untranslated sequences
derived from a positionally conserved exon present in the mouse genome.
FAK is the first example of a tyrosine kinase regulated by a domain
under the control of an alternative intronic promoter. It is also the
first example of an FA-associated protein regulated in this manner, and
thus represents a novel mechanism by which cell-adhesion signaling can
be regulated.
Cell culture.
Primary CEF were prepared and cultured as
described previously (3). The chicken B-cell lymphoma cell
line BK3A (kindly provided by T. Bender, Department of Microbiology,
University of Virginia) was maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's
medium containing 5% fetal calf serum, 1% chick serum, 10% tryptose
phospate broth, and 50 µM Cloning of genomic sequences.
A 301-bp
DraI-BglII fragment of the FRNK leader sequence
(nucleotides +45 to +346) (44) was gel purified (Qiagen) and
labeled with [
0270-7306/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Regulated Expression of Focal Adhesion
Kinase-Related Nonkinase, the Autonomously Expressed C-Terminal
Domain of Focal Adhesion Kinase
and
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-actinin, provide structural integrity to the
FA, while others serve as signaling proteins which are phosphorylated
in response to FA formation. Among these signaling proteins are
paxillin, tensin, p130CAS, and the protein
tyrosine kinase designated focal adhesion kinase (FAK).
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-mercaptoethanol.
-32P]dCTP by random priming. This probe
was used to screen a chicken genomic library derived from adult chicken
liver DNA and cloned into lambda phage EMBL-3 (Clontech). The phage
library was plated onto host strain Escherichia coli K803,
and plaques were screened for hybridization to the FRNK leader probe by
standard procedures. Positive colonies were plaque purified and
rescreened with a 272-bp AccI-ScaI DNA fragment
containing sequences encoding amino acid residues 552 to 642 of the
catalytic domain of FAK, labeled in the same manner as the FRNK leader
probe. DNA was isolated from phage
exhibiting strong hybridization to probes derived from the FRNK leader
and the FAK catalytic domain. Restriction enzyme digestion, Southern
blotting, and sequence analysis were performed to identify the location
of intron and exon sequences within these clones. DNA sequencing was
carried out with a PE-ABI Prism 377 automated DNA sequencer (Applied
Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.), using an ABI PRISM dye terminator
cycle sequencing Ready Reaction kit (Perkin-Elmer).

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FIG. 1.
RNase protection analysis of FRNK-specific RNAs. (A)
Position of the FAK-specific probe, a 352-bp fragment corresponding to
nucleotides 875 through 1227 of the chicken FAK cDNA. PTK, protein
tyrosine kinase. (B) Position of the FRNK-specific probe, a genomic
711-bp probe which spans the 5' region of the unique FRNK leader exon.
Also indicated are the approximate map positions of the 5' ends of the
RNase-resistant fragments protected by the FRNK-specific probe (C). (C)
Segments of a sequencing gel showing the positions of labeled
RNase-resistant products obtained after incubation of either control
RNA (tRNA), total CEF RNA (CEF total), or poly(A)-enriched CEF RNA
[CEF poly(A)] with a probe to GAD, FAK, or FRNK. The numbers in the
lower two panels denote relative position of the 5' end of the
protected fragment as determined by mobility relative to known standard
fragments. Exposure times are 2 days for FAK and FRNK and 4 h for
pGAD. RNA amounts subjected to RNase protection were 50 µg for FAK
and FRNK and 1 µg for pGAD.
Promoter-luciferase plasmid constructs.
A 2.4-kbp
HindIII fragment spanning nucleotides
1989 to +403 of
the FRNK genomic sequence (Hind8.3-1) was cloned directly into the
HindIII sites of the pGL3B and the pGL3E luciferase
reporter vectors (Promega). The orientation of Hind8.3-1 within each
pGL3 vector was determined by digestion with BglII and
confirmed by sequence analysis. pH83C and pH83N denote Hind8.3-1 in
pGL3B in the correct and incorrect orientations, respectively. pH83E is Hind8.3-1 in pGL3E in the correct orientation.
Cell transfections and luciferase assays.
For CEF
transfections, cells were plated in complete growth medium at a density
of 8 × 105 cells per 60-mm-diameter dish the day
before transfection. A total of 10 µg of test DNA (or test DNA plus
pGL3B to show dose dependence) was transfected per 60-mm-diameter dish
by the calcium phosphate precipitation method. Medium was replaced on
the cells within 8 to 12 h of transfection, and cells were lysed
48 h after transfection in pGL3 reporter lysis buffer (Promega).
For BK3A transfections, cells were subcultured at a density of 5 × 105 cells per ml the day before transfection. For each
transfection, 10 µg of test DNA and 750 µl of cells (at 1.25 × 107 cells/ml) were electroporated at 960 µF and 350 V
in growth medium. Electroporated cells were then transferred to
25-cm2 flasks containing 10 ml of growth medium, cultured
for 48 hours, and lysed in pGL3 reporter lysis buffer (Promega) 48 h later. For all transfections, 300 or 500 ng of
cytomegalovirus-
-galactosidase was cotransfected with test DNA.
Luciferase activity for all lysates was quantitated in a luminometer
using Promega's luciferase assay system.
-Galactosidase activity of
each lysate was measured by standard procedures. Luciferase activity
measured for each lysate was normalized to the relative
-galactosidase activity of that lysate to give relative light units.
RNase protection assay.
FRNK- and FAK-specific probes for
RNase protection were generated by using synthetic oligonucleotide
primers to PCR-amplify a region of the FRNK genomic sequence spanning
nucleotides
324 to +387 (Fig. 1B) and a region from the FAK cDNA
sequence spanning from +875 to +1227 (Fig. 1A). The PCR products were
subsequently cloned into the pCR-Script SK+ plasmid by
using a pCR-Script Amp SK+ cloning kit (Promega), and
[
-32P]CTP-labeled RNA probes were generated by using
T3 and T7 RNA polymerases (Promega). The glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate
(GAD) probe was transcribed from a pGEM3 vector (Promega) containing a
1-kb PstI GAD fragment (11). Total RNA was
isolated from cells and tissues by using RNeasy columns (Qiagen), and
poly(A) RNA was isolated from total RNA by using Oligotex resin
(Qiagen). Fifty-microgram samples of total RNA were hybridized to
2 × 105 cpm of 32P-labeled antisense RNA
probe in 30 µl of 40 mM
piperazine-N,N'-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid) (pH
6.4)-0.4 M NaCl-1 mM EDTA-80% formamide for 12 to 18 h at
50°C. Samples were digested with RNase T1 (2 µg/ml) in
10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)-0.3 M NaCl-5 mM EDTA for 30 min at room
temperature. Protected fragments were resolved on a 6% denaturing
polyacrylamide-urea gel. Dried gels were autoradiographed for 1 to 7 days at
70°C with intensifying screens.
Cell lysis, immunoprecipitation, and immunoblotting. Chicken embryos were harvested after 18 days of gestation. Organs were removed, rinsed in calcium- and magnesium-free phosphate-buffered saline (CMF-PBS; 137 mM Nacl, 2.7 mM KCL, 8.0 mM, Na2 HpO4 · 7H2O, 1.4 mM KH2PO4 [pH 7.2]), and immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen. Whole embryos were harvested after 3, 6, and 9 days of gestation, rinsed in CMF-PBS, and frozen in liquid nitrogen. Protein extracts were prepared by homogenizing tissues in supplemented radioimmunoprecipitation (S-RIPA) lysis buffer (29) with a small homogenizer (Kontes, Vineland, N.J.) and 1 ml of buffer per 0.1 g of tissue. Whole embryo extracts were prepared in the same manner, using 2 ml of buffer per 0.1 g. CEF extracts and extracts of FRNK-overexpressing CEF were obtained by lysing 100-mm-diameter plates of cells in 1 ml of S-RIPA buffer (39). All lysates were cleared by centrifugation at 4°C for 10 min, and the supernatants were collected into a 1.5-ml microcentrifuge tube. Protein concentrations were determined by the bicinchoninic assay (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.).
For immunoprecipitations, extracts from chicken tissue (1 mg), chicken whole embryos (3 mg), or CEF (1 mg) were incubated with a 1:1,000 dilution of antibody BC3 overnight at 4°C, using constant rotation. BC3 is a rabbit polyclonal antibody raised against a bacterial TrpE fusion protein containing residues 651 to 1020 of the chicken FAK C-terminal domain (29). Immune complexes were recovered by using protein A-Sepharose beads (1:1 slurry; Pharmacia) followed by a 2-h incubation 4°C with rotation. Immune complexes were collected by centrifugation, solubilized in sodium dodecyl sulfate sample buffer, resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes. After the transfer, membranes were divided such that the upper half was probed for FAK and the lower half was probed for FRNK. For FAK detection, the upper membrane was blocked for 1 h at room temperature in 5% (wt/vol) instant nonfat dry milk-TBST (Tris-buffered saline [TBS] containing Tween 20) (29), followed by an overnight 4°C incubation in fresh blotting solution containing antibody BC3 diluted 1:1,000. The lower half of the membrane was probed for FRNK by the method described above except that Tween 20 was absent for the blotting solution. The membranes were then incubated for 1 h at room temperature with the secondary antibody (donkey anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G; Amersham, Arlington Heights, Ill.) linked to horseradish peroxidase in 5% (wt/vol) instant nonfat dry milk-TBST for FAK or 5% milk-TBS for FRNK, at a 1:1000 dilution. Horseradish peroxidase-antibody binding was visualized with enhanced chemiluminescence as instructed by the manufacturer (Amersham). Immunoblotting and immunoprecipitation procedures for FAK and FRNK in mouse cell lines and adult tissues were identical to those for chicken samples, with the following modifications. Tissues were ground under liquid nitrogen prior to lysis in S-RIPA buffer. Lysates, 0.5 mg of protein, from tissues, whole embryos, or cultured cells were subjected to immunoprecipitation with a 1:100 dilution of FAK C-20 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology). Immunoblots were probed with FAK C-20 at a 1:1,000 dilution. FAK C-20 was raised against FAK C-terminal sequences of human origin which are identical to their corresponding mouse sequences.RT-PCR of mouse FRNK leader. Primer 8b1 (TCATCAGACCCTCCAGAG) was used to generate a first-strand cDNA from 250 ng of mouse lung poly(A) RNA (Ambion), using the protocol described by Gibco BRL for the Superscript II reverse transcriptase enzyme. This first-strand cDNA was amplified by PCR using primers P3 (GAGTAATTCTGGGTGGTT) and P6 (GTAGCCTGTCTTCTGGAT). PCR conditions for this and subsequent reactions are as follows: denature at 95°C for 1 min, anneal at 57°C for 1 min, and elongate at 72°C for 1 min (30 cycles). PCRs were carried out with the Pfu Turbo polymerase (Stratagene) and GeneAmp PCR core reagents (Perkin-Elmer). Transcripts in the range of 100 to 500 bp were gel purified with Qiaex II (Qiagen) and subjected to a secondary amplification with primer P6 and nested primer P5 (CCATCTGTTTGCCAAGGG). A prominent PCR product of approximately 320 bp was gel purified and reamplified with nested primers P22 (TTGCTGCACCTTCTCCTC) and P23 (TAGGGAATAGGAGGGCTG). This tertiary nested amplification gave a single prominent PCR product which was directly sequenced with primers P22 and P23.
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RESULTS |
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Genomic organization of FRNK sequences.
To determine whether
FRNK expression is regulated by an autonomous promoter or by splicing
of a larger FAK-specific RNA transcript, we cloned the genomic
sequences encoding the 5' noncoding leader sequences present in FRNK
cDNAs (FRNK leader sequence). To determine where the FRNK leader
sequence maps within the FAK locus, an
[
-32P]dCTP-labeled probe specific for the leader
sequence was used to screen a chicken genomic library. Two phage clones
which hybridized strongly to a labeled leader probe were characterized
further by restriction enzyme digestion and DNA sequence analysis. As shown in Fig. 2A, the 5' FRNK leader
sequence is encoded by a single exon which resides within a large
intron separating the 3'-most exon of the catalytic domain of FAK and
the exon encoding the 5'-most region of the C terminus (common to FAK
and FRNK). Since all of the previously defined leader sequence resides
within this exon, it is likely that this exon encodes for the complete 5' leader sequence (see below).
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FRNK mRNAs differ in their 5' termini.
To determine the
transcriptional start site(s) of the FRNK RNA transcripts, RNase
protection experiments were carried out with both total and poly(A) CEF
RNAs. RNA probes specific for the FRNK leader sequence (spanning
nucleotides
324 to +387 of the FRNK genomic clone [Fig. 1B, where +1
represents the first nucleotide of the published FRNK cDNA]), FAK
(nucleotides 875 to 1227 of FAK, encoding amino acids 253 to 369), and
GAD were hybridized to either total CEF RNA or poly(A) RNA and
subjected to digestion by RNase T1 to remove
single-stranded, unhybridized probe. Analysis of the protected
fragments on a denaturing polyacrylamide sequencing gel revealed the
protection of four major fragments with the FRNK-specific probe (Fig.
1C). Comparison of the size of each protected fragment with sizes of
DNA fragments of a DNA sequencing ladder analyzed in parallel indicated
5' termini at positions +24, +60, +222, and +242 relative to the FRNK
cDNA sequence (Fig. 1B). Since the same pattern of protected RNAs was
obtained with either total RNA or poly(A) RNA (Fig. 1C), it is likely
that all of the protected RNA species observed are derived from
cytoplasmic FRNK mRNAs. The pattern of protected FRNK RNAs is most
consistent with a transcriptional initiation process that results in
several preferred sites of RNA initiation, although at this time we
cannot rule out the possibility that some of these RNAs are generated by an as yet uncharacterized 5' processing mechanism.
FRNK expression during chick embryogenesis. To more fully characterize the pattern of FRNK expression during chicken embryogenesis, RNase protection and Western blotting were used to measure FRNK RNA and protein levels. Total RNA was prepared from whole chicken embryos harvested at day 3, 6, or 9 and hybridized to an RNA probe specific for FAK, FRNK, or GAD, respectively (Fig. 3A). The four major FRNK transcripts were readily detected in RNA prepared from 3-, 6-, or 9-day embryos although there appeared to be a slight increase in the recovery of the +24 species at day 3 relative to days 6 and 9. Conversely, in RNA prepared from day 9 embryos, there appeared to be an increase in the +242 RNA species. The relative levels of FAK and GAD protected RNAs were constant in each of the RNA samples (Fig. 3A).
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DNA sequences proximal to the 5' FRNK leader exhibit promoter
activity.
To delineate the possible mechanism(s) that govern
differential FRNK expression, we tested whether sequences proximal to
the putative start sites of FRNK RNA transcription exhibited promoter activity. A HindIII restriction fragment derived from a
genomic clone and containing nucleotides
1989 to +403 (Hind8.3-1) was cloned into the luciferase reporter vector pGL3B (Fig.
5A) in both correct and incorrect
orientations (pH83C and pH83N, respectively). These constructs were
tested for the ability to drive luciferase expression following
transfection into cultured CEF. As shown in Fig. 5B, cells transfected
with the plasmid pH83C (2.5 to 10 µg per transfection) showed a
dose-dependent transactivation of luciferase expression. Luciferase
activity in pH83C lysates was 60-fold higher than in lysates expressing
a control construct (pGL3B). Lysates derived from cells transfected
with pH83N exhibited background levels of luciferase activity (10 µg
of each construct was used per transfection unless otherwise
indicated).
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1989 to +403 of the FAK locus.
FRNK promoter activity is cell type specific.
The differential
expression of FRNK RNAs in tissues of the late-stage embryos suggested
the possibility that the promoter-like elements controlling FRNK
expression are regulated by tissue-specific factors. Previous studies
had indicated that in lymphoid cells or organs enriched with
hematopoietic cells, FRNK protein expression was undetectable
(39a). Thus, we examined FRNK RNA expression and pH83C
transactivation of luciferase expression in a chicken B-cell lymphoid
tumor cell line, BK3A. As expected, using the RNase protection assay,
FRNK RNA expression was undetectable in RNA prepared from BK3A cells.
In contrast, FAK expression was readily observed (Fig.
6A). To determine whether pH83C drives luciferase expression in the BK3A cells, pH83C, pH83N, and pH83E were
transfected into the B-cell lymphoma cell line by electroporation. Cells were harvested after 48 h, and lysates were assayed for luciferase activity. As shown in Fig. 6B, pH83C and pH83N failed to
stimulate luciferase expression above background levels in BK3A
cells. Lysates from cells expressing the SV40 enhancer linked to the
FRNK sequences (pH83E) exhibited approximately a threefold increase in
luciferase activity compared to lysates expressing the basic pGL3E
(Fig. 6C). These data indicate that the SV40 enhancer is capable of
only a slight augmentation of the low basal activity exhibited in the
BK3A cells transfected with sequences between
1989 and +403 and
suggest that the regulation of transcription within this region may be
attenuated by as yet undefined tissue-specific elements and/or factors.
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DISCUSSION |
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In this report we show that expression of FRNK, the autonomously expressed C-terminal domain of FAK, is regulated by DNA sequences located between the exon encoding the C-terminal portion of the catalytic domain and the first exon encoding the C-terminal noncatalytic domain of FAK. Four putative transcription initiation sites, each residing within sequences originally identified as the 5' noncoding leader of FRNK (44), have been mapped by RNase protection. FRNK-specific RNA is readily detected in cultured 10-day-old CEF as well as cells derived from early-stage embryos (e.g., days 3, 6, and 9). However, analysis of FRNK-specific RNA in tissues harvested from an 18-day embryo indicates that the expression of FRNK RNA becomes regulated in a tissue-specific fashion late in development, being expressed at high levels in the lung and intestine but at low levels in other organs, including the spleen, heart, and brain. A 2.4-kbp HindIII DNA fragment containing sequences 5' and 3' to the putative sites of RNA transcription fused to the luciferase gene (pH83C) activates luciferase expression when transiently expressed in CEF. In a cell line devoid of FRNK, the pre-B-cell lymphoma BK3A, pH83C does not drive luciferase expression. Thus, these results are consistent with regulation of FRNK-specific promoter elements in a tissue-specific fashion in chickens.
The identification of FRNK-specific transcriptional regulatory elements within an intron of FAK indicates that FRNK is a gene within a gene. In recent years, several examples of alternative promoters that direct the transcription of multiple RNA transcripts from a single gene have been described, thus establishing this as a novel and distinct paradigm in eukaryotic gene regulation (1). Prominent examples of a gene within a gene include telokin, inducible cyclic AMP early repressor (ICER), and calspermin. Telokin is transcribed from a smooth muscle cell-specific alternative promoter located within an intron of the smooth muscle myosin light-chain kinase (MLCK) gene (13, 21). Telokin dimers are proposed to modulate the rate of myosin phosphorylation by MLCK by direct or indirect inhibition of the active site of MLCK (49, 51). An alternative promoter embedded within the gene encoding the cyclic AMP-responsive element modulator (CREM) leads to autonomous expression of its C-terminal domain, called ICER (33). ICER appears to act as a transcriptional repressor of CREM. ICER expression is tissue specific, being predominately expressed in neuroendocrine tissues. A third example is the male germ cell-specific calmodulin binding protein calspermin, which is transcribed from an intronic promoter within the calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaM kinase) IV gene (52).
Unlike the genes for MLCK and CaM kinase IV, which both encode CaM kinases, the FAK gene is the first example of a protein tyrosine kinase gene in which an embedded intronic promoter regulates the autonomous expression of a noncatalytic domain. Interestingly, PYK2, a protein tyrosine kinase structurally related to FAK, appears to be regulated in a similar manner. A subset of cells expressing PYK2 also express the C-terminal domain of PYK2, termed PRNK (55). Like FRNK, PRNK cDNA clones contain a unique untranslated leader sequence not found in PYK2 cDNAs, indicating that PRNK may have a unique untranslated exon and be regulated by an embedded intronic promoter element. The function of PRNK is not yet known.
The evidence presented above indicate that the majority of FRNK mRNAs contain 5' ends (defined by RNase protection) which map to a region (the FRNK noncoding exon) previously identified by sequence analysis of cDNA clones isolated from a chicken embryo library. We have been unable to convincingly demonstrate RNA transcripts whose 5' ends map at or 5' to the previously identified start of the FRNK noncoding leader sequence (44). However we cannot rule out the possibility that such transcripts are present in low abundance and hence undetectable or are expressed in tissues not subject to RNase protection analysis. RNase protection studies reveal that the relative abundances of the four major FRNK RNA species are similar in FRNK-expressing cells and tissues examined, and thus these species most likely represent initiation of transcription at multiple sites.
Numerous examples of promoters that utilize multiple start sites have previously been described (27), but the mechanism by which imprecise transcription initiation is directed is still poorly understood. RNA polymerase transcripts derived from multiple start sites are generally regulated by a distinct class of promoters that lack the classic TFIID recognition element, the TATA box. Many TATA-less promoters still initiate transcription from a single site within a loosely conserved cis-acting element known as an initiator (50). However, studies of the mouse thymidylate synthase promoter suggest that initiators are not present in TATA-less promoters with multiple initiation sites (14), suggesting that novel cis-acting elements direct RNA polymerase II transcription in promoters with multiple start sites. The only conserved element that has thus far been identified in promoters with multiple starts is a protein binding sequence known as MED-1 (multiple start site element downstream 1) (27). The FRNK gene is characteristic of other genes transcribed at multiple initiation sites in that it lacks conserved positioning of classic TATA and initiator sequences relative to the start sites, and it contains the MED-1 sequence (GCTCCC) downstream of the initiation window (see below). However, the initiation window for FRNK spans about 220 bp, which is over twice the size of windows in genes in which MED-1 has been characterized. Also, MED-1 lies at position +361 relative to the first start site of the FRNK gene, while in promoters with windows of initiation of 100 bp or less, MED-1 lies between +60 and +145. These discrepancies indicate that MED-1 may be important in genes with windows of initiation larger than those initially analyzed. Studies are in progress to define the functional relevance of the putative FRNK MED-1 as well as define other elements that might contribute to the tissue-specific regulation of FRNK expression.
In contrast to the FAK RNA message, which is ubiquitously expressed, the FRNK RNA message is detected in only a subset of cells and tissues. Therefore, while FAK is likely to be under the control of a constitutively active promoter, the FRNK regulatory region tested here appears to contain tissue-specific regulatory elements. Although many TATA-less, CAAT-less promoters with multiple start sites have been identified in ubiquitously expressed housekeeping genes, such as Rb (16) and HPRT (42), other examples, such as the Wilms' tumor gene (WT1) promoter (12), appear to be regulated in a tissue-restricted fashion. However, studies on the WT1 promoter reveal that its core promoter is promiscuous, showing activity in all cell lines tested whether or not they express WT1, indicating the involvement of other regulatory elements not present in the core promoter. Because we have identified a region that is capable of directing transcription of an FRNK reporter construct in a cell-type-specific manner, analogous to the expression of FRNK itself, we speculate that this region must contain a core promoter and possibly other cis-acting transcriptional regulators.
Lung and intestine cells show the highest levels of FRNK RNA and protein expression, indicating that FRNK may predominate in cells of mesenchymal origin. Proteins which exhibit a pattern of expression similar to that of FRNK, such as the transcriptional activator HFH-8 (35) and the vacuolar H+ ATPase (34), have been found to localize to the mesoderm during early embryogenesis, and to mesenchymal cells of the lung and intestine later in development and in adulthood. Lung and intestine are organs that undergo extensive branching morphogenesis during development and continue to maintain high levels of epithelial-mesenchymal cell interactions in adulthood. Therefore, FRNK may play a role in mesenchymal-epithelial cell interactions of the lung and intestine both during branching morphogenesis in embryos and on into adulthood.
As shown in Fig. 3D, we have detected significant expression of FRNK protein in the adult murine lung. In addition, FRNK-specific mRNAs from the adult mouse lung that contain 5' noncoding sequences fused to FRNK coding sequences have been identified. Mapping of these sequences within a mouse genomic DNA fragment indicates that the 5' FRNK noncoding sequences are positionally conserved in the mouse and chicken genomes (Fig. 4). These data strongly argue that FRNK expression is not limited to avian species and likely represents a conserved mechanism for the regulation of FRNK expression in rodents and perhaps humans.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank T. Bender, D. Engel, M. Jelenik, A. Ma, A. Richardson, J. Slack, A. Sutherland, J. Taylor, S. Weed, and W. Xiong for helpful discussion. M. Macklem, C. Stoker, and J. Havens provided technical support.
This work was supported by DHHS grant CA40042 and CA29243 and grant 4491 from the Council for Tobacco Research, Inc. J.L. was supported by a fellowship from the Medical Research Council of Canada.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Microbiology, Box 441, Health Sciences Center, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22908. Phone: (804) 924-5395. Fax: (804) 982-1071. E-mail: jtp{at}virginia.edu.
Present address: Molecular Oncology Group, McGill University,
Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 1A1.
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