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Molecular and Cellular Biology, October 2001, p. 7065-7077, Vol. 21, No. 20
0270-7306/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.21.20.7065-7077.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The p65 (RelA) Subunit of NF-
B
Interacts with the Histone Deacetylase (HDAC) Corepressors HDAC1 and
HDAC2 To Negatively Regulate Gene Expression
Brian P.
Ashburner,1,
Sandy D.
Westerheide,1 and
Albert S.
Baldwin Jr.1,2,3,*
Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer
Center,1 Curriculum in Genetics and
Molecular Biology,2 and Department of
Biology,3 University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599
Received 29 June 2001/Accepted 11 July 2001
 |
ABSTRACT |
Regulation of NF-
B transactivation function is controlled at
several levels, including interactions with coactivator proteins. Here
we show that the transactivation function of NF-
B is also regulated
through interaction of the p65 (RelA) subunit with histone deacetylase
(HDAC) corepressor proteins. Our results show that inhibition of HDAC
activity with trichostatin A (TSA) results in an increase in both basal
and induced expression of an integrated NF-
B-dependent reporter
gene. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays show that TSA
treatment causes hyperacetylation of the wild-type integrated
NF-
B-dependent reporter but not of a mutant version in which the
NF-
B binding sites were mutated. Expression of HDAC1 and HDAC2
repressed tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-induced NF-
B-dependent gene
expression. Consistent with this, we show that HDAC1 and HDAC2 target
NF-
B through a direct association of HDAC1 with the Rel homology
domain of p65. HDAC2 does not interact with NF-
B directly but can
regulate NF-
B activity through its association with HDAC1. Finally,
we show that inhibition of HDAC activity with TSA causes an increase in
both basal and TNF-induced expression of the NF-
B-regulated
interleukin-8 (IL-8) gene. Similar to the wild-type integrated
NF-
B-dependent reporter, ChIP assays showed that TSA treatment
resulted in hyperacetylation of the IL-8 promoter. These data indicate
that the transactivation function of NF-
B is regulated in part
through its association with HDAC corepressor proteins. Moreover, it
suggests that the association of NF-
B with the HDAC1 and HDAC2
corepressor proteins functions to repress expression of
NF-
B-regulated genes as well as to control the induced level of
expression of these genes.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
NF-
B is an inducible
transcription factor that plays a role in the expression of a variety
of genes involved in immune and inflammatory responses and cell
survival (3, 13). There are five known members of the
mammalian NF-
B/Rel family: p65 (RelA), c-Rel, RelB, p50 (NF-
B1),
and p52 (NF-
B2). These proteins share sequence similarity over an
approximately 300-amino-acid Rel homology domain. NF-
B subunits are
able to homo- or heterodimerize through the Rel homology domain,
forming transcription factor complexes with a wide range of DNA-binding
and activation potentials. Although all Rel members bind DNA, only p65,
c-Rel, and RelB have extended carboxy termini harboring transactivation
function (37). The most widely studied and most abundant
form of NF-
B is a heterodimer of p50 and p65.
NF-
B has typically been thought of as residing in the cytoplasm in
an inactive form bound by its inhibitory proteins, members of the I
B
family (10, 37), although evidence indicates that NF-
B
may shuttle between the nucleus and cytoplasm in unstimulated cells
(5, 16). The I
B family members include I
B
,
I
B
, p105 (I
B
) (precursor of p50), p100 (precursor of p52),
and I
B
. Activation of NF-
B is induced by a number of stimuli,
including inflammatory cytokines, phorbol esters, bacterial toxins
(such as lipopolysaccharides), viruses, UV light, and a variety of
mitogens (13). Treatment of cells with these stimuli
activates the I
B kinase complex, leading to phosphorylation of
serines 32 and 36 of I
B
or serines 19 and 23 of I
B
(7, 23, 29, 43). This phosphorylation event targets the
I
B proteins for ubiquitination and degradation through the 26S
proteasome complex, resulting in the release and translocation of
NF-
B into the nucleus (9, 13).
Coregulatory (coactivator and corepressor) proteins have been shown to
be required for the regulation of gene expression by many transcription
factors. These proteins likely function by facilitating or bridging the
sequence-specific activators to the basal transcriptional machinery as
well as by altering chromatin structure. Coactivator proteins include
CREB-binding protein (CBP) and its structural homologue p300 (4,
27), steroid receptor-coactivator-1 (SRC-1) (33),
and p300/CBP-associated factor (p/CAF) (42). Consistent
with their role in altering chromatin structure, many coactivator
proteins contain histone acetyltransferase (HAT) domains which are
capable of acetylating lysine residues in the amino-terminal tails of
the core histones. In contrast to coactivators, corepressor complexes
include proteins that have histone deacetylase (HDAC) activity
(reviewed in reference 19). In mammalian cells, HDAC1 and
HDAC2 are typically found in a large complex with either the mSin3
protein (the Sin3 complex) or as part of the Mi-2-NuRD complex (19). The Sin3 complex is brought to promoters through its
interaction, either directly or indirectly, with sequence-specific
transcription factors. For example, the mSin3 protein contributes to
Mad-Max repression by interacting directly with the Mad family of
proteins (2). Alternatively, the Sin3 complex represses
nuclear receptor-mediated activation by interacting indirectly with
unliganded nuclear receptors through either the N-CoR or SMRT
corepressor proteins (14). In this context, HDAC1 and
HDAC2 are recruited to promoters through their interaction with Sin3.
However, HDACs can also repress transcription through direct
interaction with sequence-specific transcription factors. For example,
HDAC1 has recently been shown to directly interact with the MyoD basic
helix-loop-helix transcription factor to silence MyoD-dependent
transcription of p21 as well as muscle-specific genes
(22). HDAC2 has been shown to interact directly with the YY1 transcription factor, converting it from an activator to a repressor (41). The homeodomain protein TGIF, which
associates with the Smad proteins to mediate transforming growth factor
beta signaling, has been found to interact directly with HDAC proteins (40). HDAC1 has also been shown to interact with
hypophosphorylated forms of the Rb family of proteins and, through the
association of Rb with E2F, to mediate repression of E2F-dependent gene
expression (15).
Numerous reports indicate that a basal level of NF-
B can be found in
the nuclei of unstimulated cells. The function of this low level of
nuclear NF-
B is not known, but one possibility is that NF-
B
functions to repress and/or activate basal gene expression in these
cells. This effect may be regulated by the differential association of
NF-
B with coactivator and corepressor proteins. Recent work has
shown that NF-
B-dependent gene expression requires the function of
transcriptional coactivator proteins. The CBP and p300 coactivators
interact with the p65 subunit of NF-
B to enhance its ability to
activate transcription (12, 28, 45). Inducible
phosphorylation of p65 by the protein kinase A (PKA) catalytic subunit
stimulates NF-
B-dependent gene expression by enhancing the
interaction of p65 with CBP (44, 45). Two other coactivators are also known to be involved in regulating the
transactivation function of NF-
B. The HAT function of the p/CAF
coactivator was shown to be required for activation of
NF-
B-dependent gene expression (31) and the SRC-1
coactivator protein was shown to interact with the p50 subunit of
NF-
B to potentiate NF-
B-mediated transactivation (25). Thus, interaction with transcriptional coactivators
is important in mediating the transactivation potential of
NF-
B. Moreover, the differential association of NF-
B with
coactivator proteins and possibly with corepressor proteins in
unstimulated cells as well as in cells in which NF-
B has been
activated is likely to determine the level of activation or repression
of NF-
B-regulated genes.
Although the requirement of coactivators for transcriptional activation
by NF-
B is well established, very little work has been done to
determine the importance of corepressors in regulating NF-
B
transactivation. There is some previous evidence to suggest that HDAC
corepressor proteins may function to negatively regulate NF-
B
transcriptional activity (8, 17, 36). In this report, we
investigated whether corepressor proteins play a role in regulating NF-
B transactivation function. Here we find that chemical inhibition of HDAC activity using trichostatin A (TSA) results in increased expression of an NF-
B-dependent reporter gene. We show that both HDAC1 and HDAC2 regulate NF-
B-dependent transcription and we demonstrate that HDAC1 can interact directly with the p65 subunit of
NF-
B to exert its corepressor function. Finally, we show that treatment of cells with TSA results in an increased basal level of
expression as well as increased induced levels of expression of the
NF-
B-dependent interleukin-8 (IL-8) gene. We further show that this
increase in expression is likely caused by hyperacetylation of the IL-8
promoter due to the inhibition of HDAC activity by TSA. These results
suggest that regulation of NF-
B-dependent gene expression requires
the function of corepressor proteins. Moreover, we show that
corepressor proteins may function to repress the transactivation
function of the low level of uninduced NF-
B found in the nucleus of
some cell types. Therefore, in addition to inhibition of NF-
B
activity by the cytoplasmic I
B family of proteins, we propose that
NF-
B transactivation function is also regulated in the nucleus
through interaction with HDAC corepressor proteins and that a function
of this association may be to actively repress expression of
NF-
B-regulated genes.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plasmid constructs and antibodies.
The pBJ-HDAC1 expression
vector was provided by S. Schrieber (Harvard Medical School, Boston,
Mass.). pcDNA-HDAC1 was constructed by ligating a
BamHI/EcoRI fragment from pBJ-HDAC1 into the
BamHI/EcoRI sites of pcDNA3.1. The pcDNA-HDAC2
expression vector was provided by E. Seto (Moffitt Cancer Center,
University of South Florida, Tampa, Fla.). The mSin3a expression
plasmid was provided by D. Ayer (University of Utah, Salt Lake City,
Utah). pCEP4-N-CoR was provided by C. Glass (University of California
at San Diego, San Diego, Calif.). pCRX-SMRT was provided by R. Evans
(The Salk Institute, San Diego, Calif.). The CMV-p65 and CMV-p50
expression plasmids have been described previously (34).
The GAL4-p50 fusion was made by ligating full-length p50 in frame with
the GAL4 DNA-binding domain (GAL4 1-147). GAL4-VP16 contains a fusion
of the VP16 activation domain (amino acids 413 to 490) to the GAL4
DNA-binding domain and GAL4-p65 contains a fusion of amino acids 280 to
551 of p65 to the GAL4 DNA-binding domain. The plasmids used for in
vitro transcription and translation were pGEM-flag-p65,
pcDNA-p65(1-521), pcDNA-p65(1-313), pcDNA-p65(1-276), and
pcDNA-p65(270-551). GST-HDAC1 was made by fusing the full-length HDAC1
coding sequence in frame into pGEX-4T-1 (Pharmacia). Reporter plasmids
used in this study included 3X
B-Luc, which contains three copies of
the NF-
B binding site from the major histocompatibility complex
class I gene upstream of the luciferase reporter gene, and 5XGAL4-Luc,
which contains five copies of the GAL4 DNA-binding site upstream of the
luciferase reporter gene. Antibodies used in these studies were
specific for p65 (Rockland), p50 (Upstate Biotechnology;
06-886), HDAC1 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology; sc-7872), and HDAC2 (Santa
Cruz Biotechnology; sc-7899).
Cell culture, transfections, and luciferase assays.
HeLa and
293 cells were grown in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium
supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum, penicillin, and streptomycin.
Cos-7 cells were grown in Iscove's minimal essential medium
supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, penicillin, and streptomycin. NIH 3T3 cells with stably integrated wild-type or mutant
3X
B-Luc (provided by D. Guttridge, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, N.C.) and p65
/
embryonic
fibroblasts expressing either Flag-tagged empty vector or Flag-p65
(38) were grown in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% bovine calf serum, penicillin, streptomycin, and
500 µg of G418 (NIH 3T3)/ml or 450 µg of hygromycin
(p65
/
)/ml. Transfections were performed using
the Superfect transfection reagent (Qiagen) according to the
manufacturer's recommendations. For tumor necrosis factor alpha
(TNF-
) inductions, cells were treated with 10 ng of TNF-
/ml
24 h after transfection. For TSA treatments, cells were treated
with 100 nM TSA (BioMol) for 16 h prior to harvesting cells for
luciferase assays. Cells were harvested 16 h after induction and
lysed using the mammalian protein extraction reagent (M-PER; Pierce).
Luciferase assays were performed as described elsewhere
(6).
Immunoprecipitations and Western blot analysis.
The
indicated cell lines were harvested and lysed in IP buffer (50 mM
Tris-HCl [pH 7.4], 250 mM NaCl, 0.5% NP-40, 10% glycerol, 0.1 mM
EDTA, 0.5 mM dithiothreitol, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and 5 µg each of aprotinin, leupeptin, and pepstatin/ml). Whole-cell
extracts were incubated with the indicated primary antibody in a total
volume of 1 ml of IP buffer for 6 h at 4°C. For the final 2 h, 25 µl of protein A- and G-agarose beads (Santa Cruz Biotechnology)
was added. The complexes were then centrifuged at 4°C for 30 s
and the beads were washed four times with 1 ml of IP buffer. The beads
were then resuspended in sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) sample buffer,
boiled for 3 min, and analyzed on SDS-10% polyacrylamide gels.
Proteins were transferred to nitrocellulose membranes (Schleicher & Schuell), blocked with 5% blotting grade milk (Bio-Rad) in TBST (20 mM
Tris-HCl [pH 7.6], 137 mM NaCl, 0.5% Tween 20), and incubated with
the indicated antibodies for 30 to 60 min. Membranes were then washed
with TBST and incubated for 30 min with secondary antibody conjugated
to horseradish peroxidase (Promega) for 30 min, washed with TBST, and
incubated with ECL chemiluminescence reagent (Amersham). Membranes were
exposed to X-ray film to visualize the bands.
In vitro interactions.
For in vitro interactions, the p65
full-length and deletion mutants were synthesized in vitro in the
presence of [35S]methionine (NEN) using the TNT
Quick Coupled transcription and translation system (Promega) according
to the manufacturer's recommendations. Reactions were carried out at
30°C for 1 h. Ten microliters (of the 50-µl in vitro
transcription and translation reaction) was then mixed with either
glutathione S-transferase (GST) protein or GST-HDAC1 in 500 µl (total volume) of binding buffer (phosphate-buffered saline with
1% Triton X-100) in the presence of glutathione-agarose beads (Sigma)
and incubated at 4°C with gentle rocking for 1 h. Beads were
then washed three times with 1× phosphate-buffered saline containing
1% Trition X-100, resuspended in SDS sample buffer, boiled for 3 min,
and analyzed on SDS-10% polyacrylamide gels. The gels were dried and
bands were visualized by autoradiography.
Ribonuclease protection assays, Northern blot analysis, cell
treatments, and RNA isolation.
A custom Riboquant Multi-probe
RNase Protection Assay System (Pharmingen) with six genes known to be
regulated by NF-
B was used. The genes included in the kit were those
for TRAF1, TRAF2, Bfl1/A1, c-IAP-2, IL-8, and IL-2R
. Reactions were
carried out according to the manufacturer's recommendations and bands
were visualized by autoradiography. Northern blot analysis was
performed as previously described (1). Probes specific for
human IL-8 and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) were
labeled by nick translation and added directly to the hybridization
solution. HeLa cells were treated with a final concentration of 10 ng
of human recombinant TNF-
(Promega)/ml or 10 ng of mouse IL-1
(Life Technologies)/ml for the indicated times. Where indicated, TSA (Biomol) treatments were done for 18 h at a final concentration of
100 nM. Total RNA was made using Trizol reagent (Life Technologies) according to the manufacturer's recommendations.
ChIP assays.
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays
were performed using the Acetyl-Histone H3 Immunoprecipitation Assay
kit (Upstate Biotechnology) according to the manufacturer's
recommendations. The integrated wild-type and mutant 3X
B-Luc
promoter was amplified using the primer pair
5'-AGCTTGGGCTGCAGGTCG-3' and
5'-GCGGAACCGCCGGCTCTATCC-3'. The human IL-8 promoter region
from
121 to +61 was amplified with the primer pair
5'-GGGCCATCAGTTGCAAATC-3' and
5'-TTCCTTCCGGTGGTTTCTTC-3'. The human IL-8 upstream region
from
1042 to
826 was amplified with the PCR primer pair
5'-AACAGTGGCTGAACCAGAG-3' and
5'-AGGAGGGCTTCAATAGAGG-3'. Primers were end labeled
with [
-32P]dATP. PCR was performed
for 30 cycles and the products were analyzed on a 6% acrylamide gel.
The gels were dried and the bands were visualized by autoradiography.
 |
RESULTS |
TSA treatment causes increased expression of an integrated
NF-
B-dependent reporter gene.
In order to begin to determine a
possible role for HDAC corepressor proteins in regulating
NF-
B-mediated transactivation, we utilized NIH 3T3 cell lines
harboring a stably integrated NF-
B-dependent reporter gene (wild
type or mutant 3X
B-Luc). This is important since HDACs
function by modifying chromatin structure through deacetylation of
histones and transiently transfected plasmids are not efficiently
packaged into chromatin (18, 32). Treatment of the NIH 3T3
3X
B-Luc wild-type cells with TNF resulted in a five- to sixfold
stimulation of the reporter gene relative to uninduced basal expression
(Fig. 1A, left panel). Treatment of these
cells with the HDAC inhibitor TSA caused a three- to fourfold increase
over basal expression (Fig. 1A, left panel), implying that NF-
B,
possibly in association with HDAC proteins, plays a role in repressing
basal expression of the reporter gene. When cells were treated
simultaneously with TNF and TSA, a 14-fold increase was seen (Fig. 1A,
left panel), a level more than 2-fold higher than with TNF alone. The
data shown are from pools of G418-resistant colonies; however, similar
results were seen when four independent wild-type clones were tested
(data not shown). The observed increases are dependent on an intact
NF-
B binding site and not on global derepression of the repressive
chromatin structure since there was no increase in expression after TNF
or TSA treatment alone or simultaneous treatment with TNF and TSA in
the cells with the stably integrated mutant 3X
B-Luc reporter (Fig.
1A, right panel) or with a stably integrated pGL-2 basic (promoterless
vector) reporter (data not shown). Moreover, the increased expression after TSA treatment, in either untreated or TNF-induced cells, is not
due to increased levels of nuclear NF-
B, since the amount of p65 in
the nucleus of both untreated and TNF-stimulated cells was similar in
the presence or absence of TSA treatment (Fig. 1B, upper panel).
Although the amount of p65 in the nuclei of untreated cells is similar
in the presence or absence of TSA, TSA treatment results in a two- to
threefold increase in basal reporter gene expression, implying a role
for NF-
B in regulating basal gene expression. Finally, the overall
levels of p65 were not affected by treatment of cells with TSA, further
indicating that the TSA effect on NF-
B transactivation is mediated
through inhibition of HDAC activity and not by altering the amount of NF-
B (Fig. 1B, lower panel). These results are in agreement with a
previously published report that showed that treatment of HeLa cells
harboring a stably integrated human immunodeficiency virus long
terminal repeat (LTR)-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene
with TSA resulted in an increase in both basal and induced expression
of the reporter gene (8). In order to determine if the
increased expression of the wild-type integrated reporter in response
to TSA was due to hyperacetylation of the promoter region, ChIP assays
were performed. Figure 1C shows that treatment of the wild-type NIH 3T3
3X
B-Luc cells with TSA results in a dramatic increase in acetylation
of this promoter (Fig. 1C, upper panel, compare lanes 1 and 2). In
contrast, no acetylation was seen in NIH 3T3 cells containing the
mutant 3X
B-Luc reporter (Fig. 1C, upper panel, lanes 3 and 4). Taken
together, these results imply that transactivation by NF-
B is
regulated, at least in part, by association with HDAC corepressor
proteins and that inhibition of HDAC activity results in
hyperacetylation of the wild-type NIH 3T3 3X
B-Luc promoter and
subsequently higher levels of reporter expression.

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FIG. 1.
Inhibition of HDAC activity causes an increase in basal
and induced expression of an integrated NF- B-dependent reporter gene
(3X B-Luc). (A) NIH 3T3 cells harboring either integrated wild-type
3X B-Luc (left) or mutant 3X B-Luc (right) were treated in
triplicate with TNF (10 ng/ml) for 8 h, TSA (100 nM) for 18 h, or with TSA for 18 h and TNF for the final 8 h. Extracts
were prepared and relative luciferase activities were determined by
normalizing to total protein. Activity is expressed as fold activation
relative to the untreated control and is the average ± standard
deviation (SD) from a representative experiment. Experiments were
performed a minimum of three times, with similar results. UT, untreated
cells. (B) Western blot analysis on nuclear and whole-cell
extracts probing for p65 levels. (C) ChIP assay. ChIP assays were
performed on NIH 3T3 3X B-Luc wild-type (lanes 1 and 2) and mutant
(lanes 3 and 4) cells. Cells were treated with either vehicle (dimethyl
sulfoxide) or TSA for 18 h. DNA and protein were cross-linked with
formaldehyde, and DNA was sheared and immunoprecipitated with
anti-acetyl histone H3 antibody. After reversing cross-links, the DNA
was amplified using end-labeled primers specific for the promoter
region of the integrated 3X B-Luc reporter gene. PCR products were
analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and bands were
visualized by autoradiography. Input, DNA prior to immunoprecipitation
with the anti-acetyl histone H3 antibody.
|
|
Overexpression of HDAC1 and/or HDAC2 represses
TNF-
-induced expression of an NF-
B-dependent reporter
gene.
HDAC1 and HDAC2 are class I HDACs with homology to the
yeast Rpd3 HDAC protein. HDAC1 and HDAC2 interact with each other and are typically found as components of large corepressor complexes such
as the mSin3 and Mi-2-NURD complexes (19). We therefore decided to determine if HDAC1 and HDAC2 can regulate NF-
B-mediated transactivation of a transiently transfected NF-
B-dependent reporter gene. TNF treatment of Cos-7 cells transfected with the 3X
B-Luc reporter and a vector control yielded a sevenfold induction of 3X
B-Luc reporter gene activity (Fig.
2A). Overexpression of either HDAC1 or
HDAC2 reduced TNF induction of the reporter gene to about fourfold over
the basal level. Overexpression of both HDAC1 and HDAC2 together
essentially blocked induction of the 3X
B-Luc reporter gene in
response to TNF induction (Fig. 2A); however, expression of HDAC1 and
HDAC2, either alone or together, had no effect on the basal level of
expression of the reporter gene (Fig. 2A). Cells were also transfected
with a mutant form of the I
B
inhibitor in which the serines at
positions 32 and 36 had been changed to alanines. The resulting protein
(referred to as I
B
super repressor, or I
B
-SR) blocks
activation of NF-
B because it can no longer be inducibly
phosphorylated and degraded by the proteasome. As expected,
transfection of I
B
-SR resulted in inhibition of both basal and
TNF-induced expression of the 3X
B-Luc reporter (Fig. 2A).

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FIG. 2.
(A) HDAC1 and HDAC2 repress TNF-induced expression of a
transiently transfected 3X B-Luc reporter gene. Cos-7 cells were
transfected in triplicate with the wild-type 3X B-Luc reporter and a
control vector (pcDNA3.1), pcDNA-HDAC1, pcDNA-HDAC2 alone, or HDAC1 and
-2 together. Twenty-four hours after transfection the cells were either
untreated or treated with 10 ng of TNF- /ml for 8 h. Extracts
were prepared and relative luciferase activities were determined by
normalizing to total protein. Activity is expressed as fold activation
relative to the untreated control and is the average ± SD from a
representative experiment. Experiments were performed a minimum of
three times, with similar results. (B) NIH 3T3 cells harboring either
integrated wild-type 3X B-Luc (left) or mutant 3X B-Luc (right)
were transfected in triplicate as described for panel A. Twenty-four
hours after transfection the cells were either untreated or treated
with 10 ng of TNF- /ml for 8 h. Extracts were prepared and
relative luciferase activities were determined by normalizing to total
protein. Activity is expressed as fold activation relative to the
untreated control and is the average ± SD from a representative
experiment. Experiments were performed a minimum of three times, with
similar results.
|
|
One mechanism by which the HDAC proteins likely exert their corepressor
function is by modifying chromatin structure through
their HDAC
activity. However, since transiently transfected plasmids
are not
efficiently packaged into chromatin, we examined the effect
of HDAC1
and HDAC2 expression on TNF induction of the integrated
wild-type and
mutant 3X

B luciferase reporters. TNF induction
of vector
control-transfected cells harboring an integrated wild-type
3X

B-Luc
reporter gave a 14-fold induction of luciferase activity
relative to
the basal level (Fig.
2B, left panel). Transfection
of HDAC1 or HDAC2
alone reduced the level of induction to about
five- to sixfold over
basal levels (Fig.
2B, left panel). Cotransfection
of both HDAC1 and
HDAC2 resulted in a further reduction of TNF-induced
expression to an
approximately threefold total induction relative
to the basal level
(Fig.
2B, left panel). Transfection of I

B

-SR
almost completely
blocked both basal and TNF-induced expression
of the reporter (Fig.
2B,
left panel), indicating a high level
of transfection efficiency. In
addition, the basal level of expression
of the integrated reporter gene
is much lower in the cells transfected
with I

B

-SR, further
suggesting a role for NF-

B in regulating
basal, unstimulated
expression of the reporter gene. However,
expression of HDAC1 and HDAC2
either alone or together had no
effect on the unstimulated level of
expression of the reporter
(Fig.
2B, left panel). The reason for this
is not clear, but one
explanation may be that in unstimulated cells,
the amount of NF-

B
in the nucleus is already limiting relative to
the level of HDAC
proteins. Therefore, further increasing the amount of
HDACs in
the cell has no effect on the basal level of expression and
can
only cause repression when higher levels of NF-

B are found in
the nucleus after stimulation with TNF. As expected, in cells
harboring
an integrated mutant version of the 3X

B-Luc reporter,
no increase in
expression was seen after TNF induction and expression
of HDAC1 and/or
HDAC2, and I

B

-SR had no effect on reporter gene
expression (Fig.
2B, right panel). These results indicate that
the reduced levels of
reporter gene expression in cells expressing
HDAC1 and HDAC2 are
dependent on NF-

B. In addition, these results
also show that HDAC1
and HDAC2 are able to repress induction of
both a transiently
transfected and stably integrated NF-

B-dependent
reporter equally
well. This may imply that the ability of the
HDAC proteins to repress
NF-

B-mediated gene expression is not
entirely dependent on the HDAC
activity or that the chromatin
structure of the transiently transfected
reporter plasmid is able
to affect the regulation of expression of the
reporter gene and
that it can be modulated by coactivator and
corepressor proteins.
Alternatively, it is possible that the HDACs are
targeting other
proteins, such as the NF-

B subunits, for
modification.
mSin3a and N-CoR, but not SMRT, can repress NF-
B activation of a
transiently transfected reporter gene.
HDAC1 and HDAC2 are known
to form complexes directly with the mSin3a corepressor and can interact
indirectly through mSin3a with both the N-CoR and SMRT corepressor
proteins (35). In addition, a recent paper showed that
cotransfection of the SMRT corepressor with p65 was able to moderately
repress p65-mediated transactivation (20). We therefore
decided to determine if mSin3a, N-CoR, or SMRT was able to repress the
ability of TNF to induce NF-
B-dependent transactivation. In order to
test this, mSin3a, N-CoR, or SMRT was cotransfected into HeLa cells
along with the 3X
B-Luc reporter gene. The cells were either
untreated or stimulated with TNF and assayed for reporter gene
activity. These data show that mSin3a was able to modestly repress TNF
induction of the 3X
B-Luc reporter gene two- to threefold relative to
the vector control (Fig. 3A). Expression
of the N-CoR corepressor protein was also able to repress TNF-induced
expression of the reporter (less than twofold reduction) (Fig. 3B),
although to a slightly lesser extent than did mSin3a. Interestingly,
expression of SMRT resulted in a slight increase in basal expression of
the reporter gene and a 40-fold induction of expression after TNF
treatment, a level about fourfold higher than TNF induction in the
vector control cells (Fig. 3C). Our results suggest that mSin3a and
N-CoR are capable of repressing TNF-induced transactivation mediated by
NF-
B in transient transfections but that SMRT is not able to
repress, and in fact, may sequester endogenous HDAC proteins to
increase NF-
B-dependent transactivation.

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FIG. 3.
mSin3a and N-CoR, but not SMRT, can repress TNF-induced
expression of 3X B-Luc. Cos-7 cells were transfected with wild-type
3X B-Luc and either an appropriate control vector or pIRESHis-mSin3a
(A), pCEP4-N-CoR (B), or pCMX-SMRT (C). Twenty-four hours after
transfection the cells were either untreated (UT) or treated with 10 ng
of TNF- /ml for 8 h. Extracts were prepared and relative
luciferase activities were determined by normalizing to total protein.
Activity is expressed as fold activation relative to the untreated
control and is the average ± SD from a representative experiment.
Experiments were performed a minimum of three times, with similar
results.
|
|
HDAC1 targets p65.
In order to determine if HDAC1 can repress
p65-mediated transactivation, we used a fusion of full-length p50 to
the GAL4 DNA-binding domain in cotransfection experiments with p65. The
p50 protein does not have a transactivation domain and therefore the
GAL4-p50 fusion cannot efficiently activate expression of the GAL4-Luc reporter gene. However, when p65 is cotransfected with GAL4-p50, a high
level of expression is seen since p65 has a potent transactivation domain and can dimerize with p50. When transfected into HeLa cells, the
GAL4-p50 fusion can weakly activate a 5XGAL4-Luc reporter gene,
resulting in about a fourfold induction relative to expression of the
GAL4 DNA-binding domain alone (Fig. 4A).
Cotransfection of a plasmid expressing p65 resulted in a greater than
80-fold stimulation of reporter gene expression, due to dimerization of p65 with the GAL4-p50 fusion. This stimulation was dependent on the
presence of GAL4-p50, since expression of p65 with just the GAL4
DNA-binding domain did not induce expression of the reporter gene (Fig.
4A). When HDAC1 was expressed along with GAL4-p50 and p65, the level of
induction was reduced to about 20- to 25-fold (Fig. 4A). Expression of
HDAC1 with the GAL4 DNA-binding domain alone or with p65 alone did not
have any effect on reporter gene activity (Fig. 4A). Also, HDAC1 had no
effect on the low level of expression seen with the GAL4-p50 fusion
(data not shown), indicating that HDAC1 is not functioning through p50.
Expression of HDAC1 or HDAC1 and p65 had no effect on the level of
expression of the GAL4-p50 fusion (Fig. 4A, right panel). Therefore,
the observed repression caused by HDAC1 is not due to reduced GAL4-p50 expression. As a control for specificity, the effect of HDAC1 expression on the ability of the GAL4 DNA-binding domain and fusions of
the VP16 and p65 transactivation domains to the GAL4 DNA-binding domain
to activate reporter gene expression was also tested. As expected, no
effect was observed when HDAC1 was expressed with the GAL4 DNA-binding
domain (Fig. 4B). HDAC1 expression also had no effect on the high level
of activity of the GAL4-VP16 fusion (Fig 4B). A modest level of
repression (less than twofold) was seen when HDAC1 was expressed with
the GAL4-p65 fusion (Fig. 4B), possibly due to weak interactions
between HDAC1 and the p65 C-terminal region. These results provide
further evidence that the transactivation function of NF-
B is
negatively regulated by the activity of HDAC corepressor proteins and
that this repression is mediated through an interaction with p65.

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FIG. 4.
(A) HDAC1 targets the p65 subunit of NF- B. HeLa cells
were transfected with a 5XGAL4-Luc reporter plasmid along with either
the GAL4 DNA-binding domain (GAL4-BD) as a control or a full-length
fusion of p50 to the GAL4 DNA-binding domain (GAL4-p50). Where
indicated, cells were also transfected with pCMV-p65 and/or pcDNA-HDAC1
(either 0.5 or 1.0 µg). Forty-eight hours after transfection extracts
were prepared and relative luciferase activities were determined by
normalizing to total protein. Activity is expressed as fold activation
relative to the untreated control and is the average ± SD from a
representative experiment. Experiments were performed a minimum of
three times, with similar results. Right panel, Western blot probing
for GAL4-p50 to show that its expression was not affected by expression
of HDAC1. (B) HeLa cells were transfected with the GAL4 DNA-binding
domain, GAL4-VP16, or GAL4-p65 and either control vector or pcDNA-HDAC1
along with 5XGAL4-Luc reporter plasmid. Forty-eight hours after
transfection extracts were prepared and relative luciferase activities
were determined by normalizing to total protein. Activity is expressed
as fold activation relative to the untreated control and is the
average ± SD from a representative experiment. Experiments were
performed a minimum of three times, with similar results.
|
|
p65 coimmunoprecipitates with HDAC1.
In order to determine if
p65 and HDAC1 and/or HDAC2 can interact in vivo, 293 cells were
transfected with expression plasmids for p65, HDAC1, and HDAC2 and
coimmunoprecipitations were performed. As shown in Fig.
5, HDAC1 was coimmunoprecipitated with
p65 in cells transfected with p65 and HDAC1 alone or with HDAC1 and
HDAC2 (Fig. 5, lanes 3 and 5). This interaction was dependent on the presence of both p65 and HDAC1, since HDAC1 was not
coimmunoprecipitated with p65 in vector control cells or in cells
transfected with just p65 or just HDAC1 and HDAC2 (Fig. 5, lanes 1, 2, and 6). No direct interaction was seen between p65 and HDAC2 (data not shown), although HDAC2 was coimmunoprecipitated with p65 in the presence of HDAC1 (data not shown). As a control, an
immunoprecipitation and Western blot for HDAC1 from cells transfected
with HDAC1 and HDAC2 were performed. These data indicate that
HDAC1 interacts with p65 and that HDAC2, probably based on its
interaction with HDAC1, is indirectly associated with p65.

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FIG. 5.
HDAC1 interacts with p65 in transient transfections. 293 cells were transfected with the indicated plasmids and extracts were
made and used for immunoprecipitations (IP) with either a p65-specific
antibody (lanes 1 to 6) or an HDAC1-specific antibody (lane 7).
Immunoprecipitates were then used in Western blot analysis to probe for
the presence of HDAC1. Lanes 8 to 14, Western blot probed for HDAC1 on
the whole-cell extracts (WCE) used for the immunoprecipitation
reactions.
|
|
In order to determine if endogenous HDAC1 interacts with NF-

B in
vivo, coimmunoprecipitation experiments were performed using
immortalized mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) from a p65 knockout
mouse which had been reconstituted with either Flag-tagged p65
or the
Flag vector (
38). The level of expression of p65 in these
cells is similar to the level seen in p65
+/
heterozygotes and is therefore not an overexpression system (data
not
shown). The Flag-p65 line and the vector control line were
either
untreated or treated for the indicated times with TNF.
Cells were
harvested and immunoprecipitations were performed on
whole-cell
extracts using an anti-HDAC1 antibody. Results from
the vector control
p65 knockout line and from the Flag-p65-reconstituted
line are shown in
Fig.
6. As expected, there was no
detectable
p65 in either the whole-cell extracts or in the HDAC1
immunoprecipitations
from the vector control cells. In contrast, p65
was coimmunoprecipitated
with HDAC1 in the Flag-p65-reconstituted
cells. p65 was found
associated with HDAC1 in untreated cells, and
treatment with TNF
for 15, 30, or 60 min did not diminish the amount of
p65 associated
with HDAC1 (Fig.
6). There appears to be a slight
decrease in
the amount of p65 associated with HDAC1 after 30 min of TNF
treatment
(Fig.
6, upper panel, lane 3); however, the amount of HDAC1
precipitated
at this time point was also slightly diminished (Fig.
6,
lower
panel, lane 3). It therefore appears that p65 is associated with
HDAC1 even after activation of NF-

B with TNF and that there is
no
change in the amount of HDAC1 associated with NF-

B after stimulation
with TNF.

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FIG. 6.
p65 can be coimmunoprecipitated with endogenous HDAC1.
Immunoprecipitations (IP) were performed with an antibody specific for
HDAC1 on whole-cell extracts (WCE) from p65 null MEFs that had
been stably reconstituted with Flag-tagged p65 (left) or the Flag
vector (right). Lower panels, Western blot probing the
immunoprecipitations for HDAC1 from the Flag-p65-reconstituted cells
(lanes 1 to 5) or from the Flag vector-reconstituted cells (lanes 7 to
11); upper panels, Western blot probed for p65 from the HDAC1
immunoprecipitations. Lanes 6 and 12, whole-cell extracts to show the
presence of HDAC1 and p65 in the extracts. Prior to harvesting
extracts, the cells were either untreated (UT) or treated with 10 ng of
TNF- /ml for the indicated times. PI, preimmune serum.
|
|
HDAC1 can interact in vitro directly with p65.
In order to
determine if the interaction between p65 and HDAC1 observed in the
coimmunoprecipitation experiments was direct, in vitro interaction
assays using in vitro-transcribed and -translated p65 and GST-HDAC1
fusions were performed. Figure 7A shows a
diagram of full-length p65 as well as three carboxyl-terminal deletions and one amino-terminal deletion of p65 that was used in these assays.
The products of the in vitro transcription and translation reactions
are shown in Fig. 7B (lanes 1 to 5). The luciferase expression plasmid
included with the in vitro transcription and translation kit is also
shown as a control (Fig. 7B, lane 6). When the in vitro transcribed and
translated p65 was incubated with GST-HDAC1, interactions were seen
with full-length p65 as well as with all three C-terminal deletions
[p65 wt, p65(1-521), p65(1-313), and p65(1-276)] (Fig. 7C, lanes 1 to
4). However, no interaction was seen between GST-HDAC1 and the
amino-terminal deletion [p65(270-551)] (Fig. 7B, lane 5), indicating
that the region of p65 which interacts with HDAC1 lies within the Rel
homology domain of p65 (Fig. 7C, upper panel). As expected, no
interaction was seen between the luciferase control and GST-HDAC1 (Fig.
7C, lane 6) or between any of the p65 proteins and the GST control (Fig. 7C, lower panel).

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FIG. 7.
HDAC1 interacts directly with p65 in in vitro binding
assays. (A) Diagram of p65 full-length and deletion mutants used for in
vitro interaction. (B) Lanes 1 to 6, 1/10 of the indicated input in
vitro transcription and translation products used for in vitro binding
assays. The products of the in vitro transcription and translation
reactions were fractionated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
and the bands were visualized by autoradiography. (C) After the in
vitro transcription and translation reactions were performed, 10 µl
(of a 50-µl reaction) of the indicated products was mixed with
GST-HDAC1 (upper panel) or GST (lower panel) bound to
glutathione-agarose beads. After incubation for 1 h at 4°C, the
beads were washed extensively and interacting proteins were visualized
as for panel A.
|
|
Inhibition of HDAC activity causes increased expression of the IL-8
gene.
In order to determine if inhibition of deacetylase
corepressor proteins had any effect on basal or TNF-induced expression levels of NF-
B-regulated genes, ribonuclease protection assays were
performed on RNA harvested from HeLa cells after the indicated treatments. A custom ribonuclease protection assay template containing six NF-
B-regulated genes (TRAF1, TRAF2, Bfli/A1, c-IAP-2, IL-8, and
IL-2R
) was used. Of these genes, expression of the IL-8 gene was
most dramatically affected by inhibition of HDAC activity using TSA. A
very slight induction of basal and induced expression of the c-IAP-2
gene was also seen after TSA treatment (data not shown). In the absence
of TSA, TNF induction caused an increase in IL-8 expression beginning
at about 15 min postinduction and peaking at about 1 h, with the
signal beginning to go down by 2 h postinduction (Fig.
8A, lanes 2 to 5). In the presence of TSA, a higher level of basal IL-8 expression (Fig. 8A, compare lanes 1 and 6) was seen, correlating with the increase in basal expression of
the integrated 3X
B-Luc reporter gene after TSA treatment (Fig. 1A).
After stimulation with TNF and TSA, the kinetics of induction of IL-8
were similar to those of TNF stimulation alone; however, the level of
induction of IL-8 was greater in the presence of TSA treatment (Fig.
8A, lanes 7 to 10). To further illustrate the effect of TSA treatment
on TNF-induced expression of IL-8, Northern blot analysis was performed
(Fig. 8B). These results show that TSA treatment results in an increase
in basal IL-8 expression (Fig. 8B, lanes 1 and 6) and causes enhanced
and prolonged expression of IL-8 after TNF induction (Fig. 8B, lanes 2 to 5 versus lanes 7 to 10). Expression of two housekeeping genes, L32
(Fig. 8A) and GAPDH (Fig. 8A and B), was unaffected by treatment with
TNF either in the presence or absence of TSA.

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FIG. 8.
Inhibition of HDAC activity causes an increase in IL-8
expression. (A) Ribonuclease protection assay showing effect of TSA
treatment on IL-8 expression. Total cellular RNA was harvested from
HeLa cells after the indicated treatments and used in a ribonuclease
protection assay. TNF- was used at a final concentration of 10 ng/ml
for the indicated times. TSA treatment was for 18 h at a final
concentration of 100 nM. L32 and GAPDH are shown as loading controls.
Other genes used in the assay are not shown. (B) Same as panel A, but
RNA was used in Northern blot analysis to analyze the IL-8 expression
pattern. (C) Diagram of IL-8 promoter and IL-8 upstream region. Arrows
indicate primer pairs used in PCR for ChIP assays. (D) ChIP assay on
IL-8 promoter and IL-8 upstream region. Cells were treated with either
vehicle (dimethyl sulfoxide) or TSA for 18 h. DNA and protein were
cross-linked with formaldehyde, and DNA was sheared and
immunoprecipitated with anti-acetyl histone H3 antibody. After
reversing cross-links, the DNA was amplified using end-labeled primers
specific for the promoter region of the IL-8 gene or for a region
upstream of the IL-8 promoter devoid of any known promoter elements.
PCR products were analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and
bands were visualized by autoradiography. Input, DNA prior to
immunoprecipitation with the anti-acetyl histone H3 antibody. UT,
untreated cells.
|
|
Treatment of cells with TSA blocks the activity of HDAC proteins,
resulting in hyperacetylation of histones and subsequently
a higher
level of gene expression. In order to determine if TSA
treatment caused
hyperacetylation of the IL-8 promoter around
the NF-

B binding site
similar to that seen in the NIH 3T3 cells
with the wild-type 3X

B-Luc
reporter, ChIP assays were performed.
Figure
8C shows a diagram of the
IL-8 promoter, including the
NF-

B binding site and the primers used
for PCR amplification
of the IL-8 promoter region and a region upstream
of the IL-8
promoter which does not contain any known transcription
factor
binding sites. ChIP assays were performed on either untreated
cells or cells treated with TSA using an anti-acetyl histone H3
antibody. In Fig.
8D, amplification of the input DNA from the
IL-8
promoter and the upstream region used in the ChIP assay and
of the DNA
after immunoprecipitation with the anti-acetyl histone
H3 antibody are
shown. Treatment of cells with TSA resulted in
hyperacetylation of the
IL-8 promoter region (Fig.
8D, upper right
panel), whereas no
acetylation and no TSA effect was seen in the
upstream region (Fig.
8D,
lower right panel). Based on this data,
it is likely that the increased
level of expression of the IL-8
gene observed in the ribonuclease
protection assay and Northern
blot analyses is due to a localized
hyperacetylation of the IL-8
promoter.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Activation of transcription by NF-
B has been shown to require a
number of different coactivator proteins including CBP (p300), p/CAF,
and SRC-1 (12, 25, 28, 31, 44). This study was undertaken
to determine the potential role of corepressor proteins in regulating
the transactivation potential of NF-
B. Our results show that
treatment of cells harboring an integrated NF-
B-dependent reporter
gene (NIH 3T3 3X
B-Luc) with TSA, a chemical inhibitor of HDAC
corepressor proteins, leads to an increase in both basal and
TNF-induced activation of the reporter gene. These results indicate
that HDAC corepressor proteins are involved in regulating the
transactivation function of NF-
B. In support of this, we show that
transient transfection of HDAC1 and HDAC2, either alone or together, is
able to repress TNF-induced activation of both a transiently
transfected 3X
B-Luc reporter and the integrated 3X
B-Luc reporter.
Using both in vitro binding assays and coimmunoprecipitation and
Western blot analysis, we show that HDAC1 can interact directly with
the p65 subunit of NF-
B and likely exerts its corepressor function
through this interaction. Importantly, we show that inhibition of HDAC
activity using TSA results in an increase in basal and inducible
expression of the NF-
B-regulated IL-8 gene. The inducible expression
of IL-8, as well as the 3X
B-Luc reporter gene, requires activation
of NF-
B. However, it is not known if expression of these genes is
also repressed in part by NF-
B. The increase in basal expression of
the 3X
B-Luc reporter as well as the IL-8 gene in the presence of an
HDAC inhibitor indicates that HDAC proteins are functioning to repress
their expression; however, it is not yet known if this repression is
mediated through NF-
B. Infection of HeLa cells with an adenovirus
expressing I
B
-SR (Ad-I
B
-SR) results in a block in
activation of IL-8 expression (Brian P. Ashburner and Albert S. Baldwin, Jr., unpublished results). However, a low basal level of
expression is also seen after treatment of Ad-I
B
-SR-infected
cells with TSA, indicating that repression of IL-8 expression may
require the presence of NF-
B and the activity of HDAC corepressor
proteins (Ashburner and Baldwin, unpublished results). Based on these
results, we conclude that an important component regulating
NF-
B-dependent transactivation is mediated through the
interaction of NF-
B with HDAC corepressor proteins. At present, we
do not know if the presumed ability of NF-
B to repress basal,
unstimulated IL-8 gene expression is unique to IL-8 or whether other
genes will exhibit this phenomenon. Overall, these findings add yet
another level to the already complex regulation of gene expression
controlled by NF-
B.
In addition to an increase in basal expression of the 3X
B-Luc
reporter and the IL-8 gene, TSA treatment also causes an increase in
the inducible level of expression of these genes. Treatment of the NIH
3T3 3X
B-Luc cells with TNF and TSA resulted in a 15-fold increase in
reporter gene expression compared to a 5-fold increase with TNF alone.
The level of induced expression of IL-8 was also higher after TNF and
TSA treatment than treatment with TNF alone. Interestingly, only the
level of expression, not the kinetics of IL-8 expression, was altered
by TSA treatment. That is, expression can begin to be seen 15 min after
TNF induction, peaks at 30 to 60 min after induction, and begins to
decrease 2 h after TNF induction either with or without TSA
treatment. The only difference is that the level of induction in the
presence of TSA is greater than in the absence of TSA. These data
indicate that HDAC proteins may play a role in regulating the inducible
level of expression of certain NF-
B-regulated genes in addition to
repressing expression of these genes.
The primary level of regulation of NF-
B activity is through its
retention in the cytoplasm through interactions with I
B and its
subsequent release and transport into the nucleus upon activation by a
variety of stimuli. Although the majority of cellular NF-
B in
unstimulated cells is cytoplasmic, many cell types appear to have a
constitutively low basal level of nuclear NF-
B. The function of this
nuclear NF-
B in unstimulated cells is not clear, although it may be
involved in regulating basal gene expression as well as in repressing
expression of certain genes. Evidence from our lab and others has shown
that another mechanism controlling NF-
B activity is the regulation
of the p65 transactivation domain. For example, oncogenic forms of
H-Ras activate the transactivation function of p65 in a manner that is
independent of nuclear translocation (11, 26). In
addition, the serine/threonine protein kinase Akt has also been shown
to stimulate the transactivation function of p65 (21). The
mechanism by which these proteins stimulate the transactivation
function of p65 is not yet known, but one possibility is by modulating
the interaction of NF-
B with coactivator and corepressor proteins.
The p65 subunit of NF-
B is known to be inducibly phosphorylated
(30, 38, 39, 44, 45) in response to a number of different
stimuli which may regulate the interaction of p65 with coactivator and
corepressor proteins. In support of this, inducible phosphorylation of
p65 on serine 276 by the catalytic subunit of PKA enhances the
interaction of p65 with CBP, thus enhancing the ability of NF-
B to
activate transcription (44, 45).
The mechanism by which HDAC proteins regulate the activity of NF-
B
is presumably through their deacetylase activity since TSA inhibits
this activity. However, the mechanisms regulating the interactions
between NF-
B and HDAC proteins are not yet known. It is possible
that the strength of the signal activating NF-
B may determine the
activity of NF-
B by regulating the interaction of NF-
B with
coactivator proteins such as CBP and corepressor proteins such as HDAC1
and HDAC2. In this case, a stronger activation signal may result in a
greater affinity of CBP for p65 and potentially weaker interactions
with HDAC proteins, resulting in higher levels of expression. Reduced
signaling (presumably resulting in reduced phosphorylation of p65)
would result in less binding of CBP (or other coactivators) to p65 and
a greater amount of HDAC associated with p65, giving a lower level of
expression. However, since TSA inhibits the deacetylase activity of the
HDAC proteins, we do not yet know if this may also cause dissociation
of HDACs from binding to p65, allowing more CBP (or other
transcriptional coactivators) to bind. Interestingly, we have found
that treatment of HeLa cells with TSA results in enhanced
phosphorylation of p65 after a 30-min and 2-h TNF stimulation (Julie L. Hansen, Brian P. Ashburner, and Albert S. Baldwin, Jr.,
unpublished data). These results are similar to that observed for the
CREB transcription factor, which showed that HDAC inhibition
potentiated gene expression via cyclic AMP by enhancing phosphorylation
of CREB in a chromatin-dependent manner (24). It is
therefore possible that by inhibiting HDAC activity, the resulting
prolonged phosphorylation of p65 may serve to enhance association of
CBP (p300) with p65 and thus enhance gene expression.
We are presently attempting to determine the importance of other
corepressor proteins in regulating NF-
B activity. Our data indicate
that both mSin3a and N-CoR can repress TNF-induced NF-
B activation
of a transiently transfected reporter. However, we were unable to
detect an interaction between p65 and either mSin3a or N-CoR by
coimmunoprecipitation. Interestingly, transfection of the SMRT
corepressor resulted in a higher level of basal and TNF-induced
reporter gene activity. The reason for this is not clear; however, it
is possible that SMRT is acting in a manner to sequester the endogenous
HDAC proteins, thus causing the higher levels of expression. Our data
are in contrast to another report which showed that SMRT as well as
mSin3a is able to repress p65-mediated transactivation when
cotransfected with p65 (20). At this time we do not
understand this discrepancy, but it is possible that there are cell
type effects since different cell lines were used. In addition,
although we transfected SMRT, we looked at the effect of SMRT on TNF
induction of endogenous NF-
B instead of on transfected p65. The fact
that expression of SMRT resulted in a higher level of NF-
B-dependent
expression whereas mSin3a and N-CoR repressed expression may further
imply that mSin3a and N-CoR, but not SMRT, are involved in regulating
NF-
B-dependent gene expression. In conclusion, we have identified a
novel mechanism regulating the transactivation function of NF-
B.
Furthermore, our work shows that NF-
B, in association with HDAC1 and
HDAC2, plays an important role in repressing gene expression. Since
blocking the activity of NF-
B has become a primary target for drug
therapy in a number of different diseases, it is important to
understand what effect this may have on genes negatively regulated by
NF-
B and on the efficacy of the therapy itself.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank D. Ayer, S. Schrieber, E. Seto, C. Glass, and R. Evans
for providing plasmids used in this work and D. Guttridge for providing
the NIH 3T3 cells with the stable wild-type and mutant 3X
B-Luc
reporters. We also thank D. Guttridge for critical review of the
manuscript and the members of the Baldwin lab for many helpful discussions.
This work was supported by Public Health Service grants to A.S.B.
(AI35098 and CA 73756) from the National Cancer Institute. B.P.A. was
supported by a postdoctoral fellowship from the Cancer Research
Institute. S.D.W. was supported by American Cancer Society grant
PF-00-023-01-MGO.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer Center, CB# 7295, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, NC 27599. Phone: (919) 966-3652. Fax: (919) 966-0444. E-mail: jhall{at}med.unc.edu.
Present address: Department of Biological Sciences, Univ. of
Toledo, Toledo, Ohio 43606.
 |
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, October 2001, p. 7065-7077, Vol. 21, No. 20
0270-7306/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.21.20.7065-7077.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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