Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Molecular and Cellular Biology, April 2003, p. 2720-2732, Vol. 23, No. 8
0270-7306/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.23.8.2720-2732.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Dipartimento di Medicina Sperimentale e Clinica "G. Salvatore," Università degli Studi di Catanzaro "Magna Græcia," 88100 Catanzaro, Italy
Received 14 August 2002/ Returned for modification 16 October 2002/ Accepted 13 January 2003
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Expression of the IR in the classical insulin target tissues, muscle, liver, and fat, is high. However, very little is known about the regulatory mechanisms controlling the IR at the level of gene expression. The IR is of major importance in certain states of insulin resistance in humans, in which decreased expression of the receptor may lead to defective transmembrane signaling (35, 37). Moreover, even though it is an open question whether the IR plays a critical role in aging and longevity in mammals as well as in Caenorhabditis elegans, IR signaling in the central nervous system plays an important role in regulation of energy disposal, fuel metabolism, and reproduction (4). Thus, regulation of IR gene expression seems to be important from both biological and clinical aspects.
As a step toward understanding the molecular basis of regulation of IR gene expression, the promoter region of the human IR gene has previously been identified and characterized (1, 20). This region extends over 1,800 bases 5' upstream from the IR gene ATG codon, is extremely GC rich, and contains a series of GGGCGG repeats that are putative binding sites for the mammalian transcription factor Sp1 (27). The IR gene promoter lacks a TATA box or consensus initiator sequences and includes multiple transcription initiation sites primarily within the first 300-bp GC-rich region (20). Like other housekeeping promoters, the IR gene promoter confers a basal level of transcriptional activity common to all cells, whereas significantly higher transcriptional activity is induced in the muscle, liver, fat, and brain, suggesting the existence of tissue-specific transcriptional regulation for this promoter.
Previously, we identified two unique AT-rich sequences within the IR gene promoter, C2 and E3, which had a significant ability to drive transcription when introduced into mammalian cells (1). We have shown recently that both these sequences are positively regulated by the architectural transcription factor HMGI-Y, a distinct member of the high-mobility group (HMG) protein family (3). HMGI-Y binds to AT-rich regions in the minor groove of DNA via highly conserved DNA-binding peptide motifs called AT hooks and contributes importantly to the transcriptional activation of numerous mammalian genes in vivo by modifying DNA conformation and by recruiting transcription factors to the transcription start site (5, 31). Promoters of genes that are activated in a tissue-specific manner are often regulated by a combination of tissue-specific and ubiquitous transcription factors, where the ubiquitous element facilitates or enhances the action of one or more tissue-specific transcription factors (26). In this paper we demonstrate for the first time that HMGI-Y acts on the IR promoter as an element necessary for the formation of a transcriptionally active multiprotein-DNA complex involving, in addition to the HMGI-Y protein, the ubiquitously expressed transcription factor Sp1 and the C/EBPß. We show that HMGI-Y physically interacts with Sp1 and C/EBPß in vitro and in vivo and greatly enhances transactivation of the IR promoter by both these transcription factors in HepG2 human hepatoma cells, a cell line readily expressing IR. Additionally, overexpression of HMGI-Y in Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-transformed lymphoblasts from a patient with type 2 diabetes associated with defects in HMGI-Y nuclear protein and reduced expression of IR significantly increases IR gene transcription and efficiently restores cell surface expression of the receptor and insulin-binding capacity.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Oligonucleotides and EMSA. Wild-type and mutant C2 (300-bp) and E3 (300-bp) sequences of the human IR promoter region were generated by PCR amplification using the previously described recombinant plasmids pCAT-C2 and pCAT-E3 (1) and their mutagenized clones as templates (see below) and the following primers: C2 for, 5'-TCGAGTCACCAAAATAAACAT-3' (for wild-type and mutated oligonucleotides); C2 rev, 5'-TGCAGGGGAGGGAGGTGCCGC-3' (for wild-type oligonucleotides); pCAT-C2 rev, 5'-ATTGGGGATATATCAACGGTGGTATATCC-3' (for mutated oligonucleotides); pCAT-E3 for, 5'-TACGCCAAGCTTGCATGCCTGCAG-3' (for mutated oligonucleotides); E3 for, 5'-AGATCTCTGGCCATTGCACTCCAG-3' (for wild type oligonucleotides); and E3 rev, 5'-TTCAATAAACAGTTTGCTAGGAGC-3' (for wild type and mutated oligonucleotides). 32P-labeled C2 and E3 were used in electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs) as previously described (1). Double-stranded oligonucleotides containing wild-type or mutated binding sites for C/EBPß (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, Calif.) were used in competition studies. Double-stranded 45-mer oligonucleotides containing relevant binding elements for HMGI-Y (5'-GAGAAAAACTCCATCTaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaAAAAAACA-3') or Sp1 (5'-GGGAGGCggGGAGgCGgGCGGGGCggGGCGGGACCGgGCgGCACC-3') were synthesized chemically (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, Md.) from E3 and C2, respectively, and used in decoy experiments (only the coding strand is shown; mutagenized bases are identified by lowercase letters; HMGI-Y and Sp1 binding sites are underlined).
GST pull-down assay. 35S-labeled proteins (hemagglutinin [HA]-tagged HMGI, Sp1, and C/EBPß) were synthesized in vitro by using the TNT-T7 quick-coupled transcription/translation system (Promega, Madison, Wis.). Glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusion protein expression vectors including those for HMGI and derivatives, a kind gift from D. Thanos (University of Columbia, New York, N.Y.), and Sp1 and derivatives, a kind gift from H. Rotheneder (University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria), and the pGEX-2TK control vector (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, N.J.) were transformed into the BL21 strain of Escherichia coli (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.), expanded in suspension culture, and induced for 2 h with 0.5 mM isopropyl-D-thiogalactopyranoside. Bacteria were pelleted, sonicated in ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline lysis buffer containing 1% NP-40, 10% glycerol, 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT), 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), 10 µg of pepstatin A, leupeptin, and aprotinin/ml, and 0.4 mg of lysozyme/ml, and centrifuged. The resultant supernatant was then added to 300 µl of glutathione-agarose beads, mixed on a rotating wheel at 4°C for 2 h, and centrifuged. Bound GST-fused proteins in the pellet were washed five times with lysis buffer and resuspended in 300 µl of binding buffer (50 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 0.05% NP-40, 0.25% bovine serum albumin [BSA], 1 mM PMSF, 1 mM DTT). Bound protein was quantitated with the Coomassie protein assay reagent (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.), and 0.5 µg of each GST-protein bound to glutathione-agarose beads was incubated with 7 µl of in vitro-translated 35S-labeled protein in 150 µl of binding buffer at 4°C for 2 h. Reactions were terminated by centrifugation, the precipitate was washed three times with protein binding buffer and subjected to a sodium dodecyl sulfate-10% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-10% PAGE), and proteins were visualized by autoradiography.
Immunoprecipitations and immunoblotting.
For immunoprecipitations, aliquots of HepG2 or 3T3-L1 cell nuclear extract or HMGI-Y and pure Sp1 together were incubated for 3 h with rotation at 4°C with 10 µl of antibody-coupled protein A beads. Beads were recovered by gentle centrifugation and washed three times with 500 µl of NETN wash buffer (0.1% NP-40, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0]) for 5 min. Protein was removed from the beads by boiling in sample buffer for 5 min and analyzed by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting as described previously (3). For immunoprecipitation studies with the Sp1 antibody, primary antibody-agarose conjugate (PEP 2; 10 µg; Santa Cruz Biotechnology) was added to nuclear extract from 3T3-L1 cells and protein was analyzed as described above. Western blot analyses of HMGI-Y, Sp1, and C/EBPß in nuclear extracts from HepG2, MCF-7, and EBV-transformed lymphoblasts from healthy and diabetic individuals were performed as described previously (3). Antibodies used for these studies were as follows: anti-HMGI-Y (3), anti-Sp1 (PEP 2; 1:250), and anti-C/EBPß (C-19; 1:1,000) (Santa Cruz Biotechnology). C/EBPß (
198) antigen (Santa Cruz Biotechnology) was used as a positive control.
For covalent coupling of antibodies to protein A-Sepharose (Amersham Pharmacia), an anti-HMGI-Y or anti-C/EBPß polyclonal antibody was mixed with beads and bound for 1 h with rotation at room temperature. After extensive washing with 200 mM sodium borate (pH 8.0), solid dimethyl pimelimidate (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.) was added to a final concentration of 20 mM and the components were mixed on roller for 30 min at room temperature. To stop the reaction, the beads were washed twice in 200 mM ethanolamine, pH 8.0, and incubated on roller for 2 h at room temperature in 200 mM ethanolamine. Antibody-coupled protein A beads were washed twice in phosphate-buffered saline and used in immunoprecipitation studies.
Immunodepletion and in vitro transcription. Protein A beads (100 µl) were suspended in 400 µl of transcription buffer (30 mM HEPES [pH 7.9], 3 mM MgCl2, 140 mM KCl) and mixed gently with 100 µl of either anti-Sp1 or anti-HMGI-Y polyclonal antibodies or control (unrelated rabbit serum immunoglobulin G) antibodies by end-over-end rotation for 2 h at 4°C. HeLa nuclear extracts (400 µl; Promega) containing 0.1 mg of BSA/ml were gently mixed with 100 µl of antibody-coupled beads and incubated for 30 min at 4°C. This step was repeated three times, and the extracts were then transferred to UFCMC ultrafiltration units (Millipore, Bedford, Mass.) and centrifuged at 2,000 x g for about 2 h at 4°C to achieve an approximately threefold concentration. Immunodepleted HeLa extracts were employed in in vitro transcription studies using the HeLa cell extract in vitro transcription kit (Promega) in the presence of the linearized pCAT-IR plasmid (1) as the DNA template, with or without HMGI-Y (3) and/or pure Sp1, a kind gift from R. Tjian (University of California, Berkeley). Hybridization of RNA transcripts with a 32P-labeled chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) primer and reverse transcription were carried out as reported previously (39). For competition experiments, double-stranded oligonucleotides containing wild-type or mutated HMGI-Y and/or Sp1 or C/EBPß binding sites were added to untreated HeLa extracts and the extracts were incubated for 15 min at room temperature before exposure to the IR-CAT template.
Plasmids and mutagenesis. Eukaryotic expression plasmids used in this study were as follows: pcDNA1-HMGI-Y (sense and antisense), a kind gift from T. Maniatis (Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.), pEVR2/Sp1, a kind gift from G. Suske (Philipps University Marburg, Marburg, Germany), and pSG5-C/EBPß, a kind gift from T. Penning (University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia). Plasmids pSG5-C/EBPß and pcDNA3-Sp1, a kind gift from K.-S. Chang (University of Texas, Houston), and the HA-I expression vector for HA-tagged HMGI, a kind gift from G. Manfioletti (University of Trieste, Trieste, Italy) were used in in vitro transcription and translation.
Site-directed mutagenesis of DNA binding sites for HMGI-Y and/or Sp1 in pCAT-C2 and pCAT-E3 was performed by the overlap extension method (11) using wild-type C2 and E3 sequences as initial templates in PCRs and the following primers (Life Technologies Inc.): C2-HMGI-Y for, 5'-GCCCACTATGAACccAATAGCAAccTGGTAGAGAAAGG-3', and C2-HMGI-Y rev, 5'-CCTTTCTCTACCAggTTGCTATTggGTTCATAGTGGGC-3'; C2-Sp1 for, 5'-CCCGGCACAGGGAGGCttGGAGaCGtGCGGGGCG-3', and C2-Sp1 rev, 5'-CGCCCCGCaCGtCTCCaaGCCTCCCTGTGCCGGG-3' (first round); C2-Sp1 for, 5'-GACGTGCGGGGCttGGCGGGACCGaGCtGCACCTCCCTCC-3', and C2-Sp1 rev, 5'-GGAGGGAGGTGCaGCtCGGTCCCGCCaaGCCCCGCACGTC-3' (second round); E3-HMGI-Y for, 5'-AACTCCATCTcttctagAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAACAG-3', and E3-HMGI-Y rev, 5'-CTGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTctagaagAGATGGAGTT-3' (first round); E3-HMGI-Y for, 5'-ATCTCTTCTAGAAgcgctagctAAAAAAAAACAGAGAG-3' and E3-HMGI-Y rev, 5'-CTCTCTGTTTTTTTTTagctagcgcTTCTAGAAGAGAT-3' (second round); E3-Sp1 for, 5'-AAGGAAACGGAACTGtGatGAtGATTTGCAAAAATATG-3', and E3-Sp1 rev, 5'-CATATTTTTGCAAATCaTCtaCaCTGTTCCGTTTCCTT-3'. Mutagenized bases are in lowercase letters. Mutations were confirmed by sequence analysis.
Transfection studies. Recombinant vectors containing wild-type or mutant versions of the C2 or E3 promoter element and effector vectors for HMGI-Y (HMGI isoform protein), Sp1, or C/EBPß were transiently transfected into HepG2 and MCF-7 cells by the calcium phosphate precipitation method, and CAT activity was assayed 48 h later as previously described (1). EBV-transformed lymphoblasts (4 x 106 cells per plate) were transfected by the DEAE-dextran method (3, 30) in 60-mm-diameter dishes and cells were harvested 72 h after transfection. As an internal control of transfection efficiency, ß-galactosidase activity was measured in addition to protein expression levels (3). For antisense experiments, reporter vectors were cotransfected into cells with the expression plasmid pcDNA1 containing the HMGI-Y cDNA in the sense or antisense orientation in the absence or presence of Sp1 antisense (5'-CTGAATATTAGGCATCACTCCAGG-3') or sense (5'-CCTGGAGTGATGCCTAATATTCAG-3') commercially synthesized phosphorothioated deoxynucleotides (Life Technologies) (40). 125I-insulin binding to HepG2 cells and EBV-transformed lymphoblasts treated with HMGI-Y and/or Sp1 antisense deoxynucleotides was measured 72 h after transfection, as described previously (3). To assess the effect of distamycin A (Sigma) and/or bisanthracycline WP631 (Vinci-Biochem Alexis, Vinci, Italy) on the IR promoter, transfected HepG2 cells were incubated with medium containing DNA-binding drugs and analyzed for CAT activity 48 h after transfection. For decoy experiments, MCF-7 cells and EBV-transformed lymphoblasts were cotransfected with CAT reporter vectors plus 20 µg of double-stranded oligonucleotides containing wild-type or mutated C/EBPß binding site sequences and CAT activity was measured as described above.
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
HMGI-Y interacts with Sp1 in the absence of DNA. Direct physical association between HMGI-Y and multiple transcription factors has been reported (31, 36). To analyze the ability of HMGI-Y and Sp1 to interact with each other in vitro, in the absence of DNA, we first performed a GST pull-down assay, in which in vitro-translated 35S-labeled Sp1 was analyzed for its ability to be specifically retained by a GST-HMGI affinity resin. As shown in Fig. 3A, Sp1 was retained by GST-HMGI but not GST alone, suggesting that Sp1 interacts physically with HMGI-Y in vitro. In a reciprocal experiment, in vitro-synthesized 35S-labeled HMGI bound specifically to a resin carrying GST-Sp1 but not to a resin carrying GST alone. A bona fide interaction between HMGI and Sp1 was observed in the presence of high concentrations of ethidium bromide, which has been shown to disrupt DNA-dependent protein-protein contact (15). Interaction between HMGI-Y and Sp1 was further investigated in coimmunoprecipitation studies with either cell nuclear extract or HMGI-Y and pure Sp1 and an antibody against HMGI-Y immobilized on protein A beads. As shown in Fig. 3B, immunoprecipitation of HMGI-Y from HepG2 nuclear extracts followed by Western blot analysis for Sp1 revealed a major specific band, which migrated in a position corresponding to the size of Sp1. An identical result was obtained with HMGI-Y and pure Sp1, indicating that the binding of HMGI-Y to Sp1 is direct and not mediated by additional nuclear factors. When the same transfer was reprobed with the anti-HMGI-Y antibody, a unique specific band, which migrated in a position corresponding to the size of HMGI-Y was detected. Taken together, these data unequivocally indicate that HMGI-Y and Sp1 physically interact either in vitro or in vivo in the context of the intact cell and suggest that physical and functional cooperation between HMGI-Y and Sp1 on the IR promoter might occur through direct contact as well.
|
B (39). Similar experiments were performed with GST-Sp1 mutants and in vitro-synthesized 35S-labeled HMGI. As shown in Fig. 3C, Sp1 mutant 612-778, containing the zinc finger motifs plus activation domain D, was able to bind HMGI with high affinity. Sp1 DNA binding-deficient mutant 1-611, which retains the transcription activation domains A, B, and C, interacted also with HMGI, although to a lesser extent than the full-length (1-778) GST-Sp1. Conversely, the amino-terminal mutant 1-283, containing Sp1 repression domain R plus glutamine-rich domain A, was totally unable to retain any labeled HMGI. Thus, these findings indicate that Sp1 may interact with HMGI-Y through multiple functional domains that can function as potent activators of transcription in the presence of HMGI-Y. Cooperative interaction between HMGI-Y and Sp1 is required for IR gene transcription and IR protein expression. In the light of the above-mentioned data indicating that HMGI-Y physically interacts with Sp1 and facilitates its binding to the IR promoter, it was important to ask whether any perturbation of this interaction could have a negative effect on IR promoter function in vivo. For this purpose, the ability of C2 or E3 IR promoter elements to drive the expression of the CAT gene was measured in HepG2 cells, in which endogenous levels of HMGI-Y and Sp1 were specifically lowered by using an antisense approach (3, 36). As shown in Fig. 4, the HMGI-Y antisense expression plasmid inhibited the activity of the C2-containing vector (pCAT-C2), as judged by the decrease in CAT activity in transfected cells, and significantly reduced the binding of Sp1 to C2 and E3 probes (data not shown). Similar results were obtained when Sp1 antisense cDNA was used, either alone or in combination with HMGI-Y antisense cDNA. The absence of a further reduction in IR promoter activity with the knockout of both HMGI-Y and Sp1 suggests that the two factors functionally cooperate in delivering an activation signal to the basic transcription machinery. CAT activity correlated with HMGI-Y and Sp1 protein expression levels, as measured by Western blot analyses, and was not inhibited in cells transfected with an expression vector containing HMGI-Y cDNA in the sense orientation or Sp1 sense oligonucleotides (Fig. 4). In concert with these findings, perturbation of the HMGI-Y-Sp1 protein complex in vivo had inhibitory effects on the cell surface expression of the IR, as demonstrated by the reduction of 125I-insulin binding to HepG2 cells exposed to HMGI-Y and/or Sp1 antisense cDNA (Fig. 4).
|
90% reduction in CAT activity, and this, in addition to the fact that mutation of the HMGI-Y site profoundly diminished IR promoter activity, even when the Sp1 binding site was intact, provides further indication of the existence of important functional interactions between HMGI-Y and Sp1. Similar results were obtained with the pCAT-E3 reporter plasmid (data not shown). In concert with these findings, treatment of transfected HepG2 cells with distamycin A and/or bisanthracycline WP631, which have been found to selectively block DNA binding by HMGI-Y and Sp1, respectively (38, 23), inhibited IR promoter-induced CAT activity in a dose-dependent manner, and this inhibition correlated with the decrease in DNA-binding activity by the C2 probe when both chemical agents were used in EMSAs with either HMGI-Y or pure Sp1 (Fig. 4). HMGI-Y physically interacts with C/EBPß and enhances its binding to the IR promoter. Levels of C/EBPß are normally reduced in hepatoma cell lines compared with levels in normal liver (7). Therefore, DNA-protein and protein-protein interaction studies with HMGI-Y and C/EBPß were performed with nuclear extracts from 3T3-L1 cells, whose differentiation into adipocytes is followed by an early increase in C/EBPß protein levels (21). To see whether HMGI-Y had any influence on the binding of C/EBPß to the IR promoter, we carried out EMSAs by using a fixed amount of nuclear extracts from early-differentiated 3T3-L1 adipocytes in the presence of increasing quantities of pure HMGI-Y. Under these conditions, the binding of C/EBPß to probe C2 was progressively augmented (Fig. 5A) and a slightly increased retardation of the C/EBPß complex was visible, meaning that HMGI-Y and C/EBPß were simultaneously binding adjacent sites on the same probe, as confirmed in supershift analyses using either the anti-HMGI-Y or anti-C/EBPß antibody. The binding of C/EBPß did not change in the presence of increasing amounts of BSA and did not vary with probe C2m, containing a mutation at the HMGI-Y binding site, suggesting that the binding of C/EBPß to the IR promoter may depend on the interaction of HMGI-Y with its DNA binding element, revealing, in this respect, a behavior virtually identical to that shown by the interaction between HMGI-Y and Sp1. Similar data were obtained with wild-type and mutant versions of probe E3 (data not shown).
|
To verify that the interaction between HMGI-Y and C/EBPß observed in vitro resembles the interaction in vivo, we performed coimmunoprecipitation studies using an antibody against C/EBPß immobilized on protein A beads. As shown in Fig. 5C, immunoprecipitation of C/EBPß from nuclear extracts from early-differentiated 3T3-L1 cells followed by Western blot analysis for HMGI-Y revealed a unique specific band, which migrated in a position corresponding to the size of HMGI-Y. When the same transfer was reprobed with an anti-C/EBPß antibody, a major band which migrated in a position corresponding to the size of C/EBPß was observed. Thus, these findings indicate that these two factors physically interact in vivo. Moreover, when immunoprecipitation of C/EBPß from 3T3-L1 nuclear extracts was followed by immunoblot analysis for Sp1, it was found that the Sp1 protein can be detected as well (Fig. 5C). Further evidence of the interaction between all three transcription factors was obtained by performing coimmunoprecipitation experiments with nuclear extracts from 3T3-L1 cells and an antibody against Sp1 immobilized on protein A beads. As expected, immunoprecipitation of Sp1, followed by immunoblot analyses with specific antibodies, allowed the identification of three proteins including, in addition to Sp1, HMGI-Y and C/EBPß (Fig. 5C). Therefore, we conclude that a physical complex consisting of HMGI-Y, C/EBPß, and Sp1 exists in vivo, in the context of the intact cell.
Activation of IR gene transcription by C/EBPß requires HMGI-Y and is enhanced by Sp1. We next performed experiments to see whether HMGI-Y and C/EBPß cooperate to activate the IR promoter at the transcriptional level. To test this possibility, HepG2 cells were cotransfected transiently with CAT reporter plasmids containing the C2 (pCAT-C2) or E3 (pCAT-E3) IR promoter sequence and the C/EBPß effector vector, in the absence or presence of the HMGI-Y antisense expression plasmid. As shown in Fig. 6A, overexpression of C/EBPß in HepG2 cells, significantly increased the CAT activity of both C2 and E3 promoter elements. However, CAT activity was significantly reduced in the presence of the HMGI-Y antisense expression plasmid, indicating that transactivation of the IR promoter by C/EBPß requires HMGI-Y. Similar results were obtained with CAT reporter constructs pCAT-C2/HMGI-Ym and pCAT-E3/HMGI-Ym, containing mutated HMGI-Y binding elements. With either of these constructs, transactivation of the IR promoter by C/EBPß was effectively prevented, even in the presence of endogenous HMGI-Y and overexpressed C/EBPß.
|
HMGI-Y, Sp1, and C/EBPß are required for full activation of the IR promoter in in vivo and in vitro transcription studies. Finally, we asked whether the interplay among HMGI-Y, Sp1, and C/EBPß could also be demonstrated to have functional sequelae in late-passage MCF-7 human breast cancer cells, a cell line ideally suited for studying the effects of these proteins on transcription since it does not express appreciable levels of either HMGI-Y or Sp1 (18, 32), while C/EBPß is constitutively expressed (6). As shown in Fig. 7A and B, simultaneous overexpression of HMGI-Y and Sp1 in these cells led to a significant increment in CAT activity that exceeded that seen with either factor alone and that was at least in part dependent on endogenous C/EBPß, as revealed by a C/EBPß decoy strategy (28). As shown in Fig. 7B, cotransfection of a cis element decoy against the C/EBPß binding site resulted in a 75% reduction in CAT activity, whereas transfection of the mutated C/EBPß decoy element, which fails to bind the C/EBPß protein in vitro, was ineffective. Induction of CAT activity required intact binding sites for HMGI-Y and Sp1, as demonstrated by diminished activity of constructs mutated at either or both of these sites. Similar results were obtained with wild-type and mutant pCAT-E3 reporter plasmids (data not shown).
|
Studies with EBV-transformed lymphoblasts from diabetic patients and nondiabetic control subjects. The above observations were supported further by the evaluation of transcriptional regulation of the IR gene in EBV-transformed lymphoblasts from one patient with the usual features of type 2 diabetes, in which defects in nuclear proteins regulating the IR gene were previously reported (2). In EBV-transformed lymphoblasts from this patient, IR expression was decreased despite the fact that the IR gene was normal (2). As shown in Fig. 8, the expression of HMGI-Y in these cells was markedly reduced compared to that in cells from control subjects, and this defect paralleled the decrease in IR promoter function in vivo in intact cells. Forced expression of HMGI-Y in these cells led to a significant increment in CAT activity, and this enhancement was specific, since no stimulation of CAT activity was observed when the pCAT-C2 reporter vector was transfected into cells in the presence of an expression vector containing HMGI-Y cDNA in the antisense orientation. CAT activity in cells with forced expression of HMGI-Y was also impaired by the Sp1 antisense effector plasmid and/or by cotransfection of a cis element decoy against the C/EBPß binding site.
|
In previous studies of EBV-transformed lymphoblasts from several individuals with type 2 diabetes in which expression of the insulin receptor protein was normal, Brunetti et al. found that 125I-labeled insulin binding was similar to that in lymphoblasts from nondiabetic control subjects (2). 125I-insulin binding performed on intact EBV-transformed lymphoblasts from the diabetic patient with reduced expression of both insulin receptor and HMGI-Y proteins revealed a significant decrease in insulin binding compared to that in lymphoblasts from nondiabetic and diabetic control subjects. In concert with the findings above, forced expression of HMGI-Y in transfected lymphoblasts from the diabetic patient with reduced levels of HMGI-Y efficiently restored insulin binding capacity, as demonstrated by measuring 125I-insulin binding to intact cells (Fig. 8, right). Conversely, perturbation of the HMGI-Y-Sp1-C/EBPß protein complex in vivo, by reducing HMGI-Y protein levels in cells transfected with the HMGI-Y antisense expression vector, had inhibitory effects on insulin binding capacity, as demonstrated by the reduction of 125I-insulin binding to intact EBV-transformed lymphoblasts from diabetic control subjects. 125I-insulin binding to these cells correlated with HMGI-Y protein expression, as shown by Western blot analysis of nuclear proteins from transfected cells (Fig. 8, right).
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
However, Sp1 binding sites within the promoter region of the IR gene are unlikely to be the major determinant of the tissue-specific expression of the IR gene since the distribution of Sp1 in tissue does not reflect that of the IR and since Sp1 expression in the classical insulin target tissues, muscle, liver, and fat, is low (33). Therefore, it appears likely that, in these tissues, additional factors are needed for transcriptional initiation even in the presence of low levels of Sp1. C/EBPß plays an important role in the regulation of gene expression in the liver and other insulin-responsive tissues (7, 13). Studies of cell cultures and knockout mouse models indicate that C/EBPß contributes to the regulation of hepatic glucose production and plays an important role in the regulation of metabolic processes (17). Herein, we demonstrate that C/EBPß is required for full activation of IR gene transcription in HepG2 cells and that this transactivation appears to be specifically supported and strongly potentiated by Sp1. Evidence for cooperative interactions between C/EBPß and Sp1 in the transcriptional regulation of the rat CYP2D5 cytochrome P-450 gene has been previously reported (16). In addition, a functional interplay among C/EBPß and Sp1 family factors has been demonstrated in the context of the CD11c integrin gene promoter (19). On the other hand, functional cooperation between HMGI-Y and C/EBPß for the transcriptional activation of the leptin promoter has been recently reported (24). However, cooperation between HMGI-Y and C/EBPß occurs differently in the cases of the leptin gene and the IR gene. There are no HMGI-Y-DNA binding sites on the leptin promoter, and physical interaction between the two factors contributes to efficient functional cooperation in the transactivation of this gene. In contrast, the binding of HMGI-Y to the IR promoter is a prerequisite for the stimulation of the binding of C/EBPß to its DNA binding site. Functional cooperation between HMGI-Y and C/EBPß in the transactivation of the IR promoter could be mediated by HMGI-Y-induced changes in DNA structure that could enhance the affinity of C/EBPß for its target DNA. In this scenario, HMGI-Y could facilitate the interaction between C/EBPß and Sp1 and perhaps among other DNA-binding proteins that bind in the immediate vicinity, thereby promoting the formation of an active transcription complex. Mutations affecting either HMGI-Y or Sp1 DNA binding markedly impaired transactivation of the IR promoter by C/EBPß, indicating that the binding of HMGI-Y and Sp1 to IR DNA is of crucial importance for both basal and induced IR gene expression.
Our observations consistently support the hypothesis that defects in the expression of these nuclear binding proteins may cause decreased IR expression and induce insulin resistance. Defects in a nuclear regulatory protein either identical to or highly related to the architectural transcription factor HMGI-Y in patients with insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes mellitus have been previously reported by our group (2). We report herein having found a defect in a protein from one patient with the usual features of type 2 diabetes. In EBV-transformed lymphoblasts from this patient, IR gene transcription was significantly impaired despite the fact that the IR gene was normal. In this patient we found that the expression of HMGI-Y was markedly reduced, suggesting that this defect may induce insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. Consistent with this, overexpression of HMGI-Y in transfected lymphoblasts from this patient significantly increased IR gene transcription and efficiently restored cell surface expression of the IR and insulin-binding capacity. The identification of this defect in a patient with a common form of diabetes is consistent with the notion that tissue-specific alterations of IR levels might be associated with insulin resistance, an early feature of type 2 diabetes.
There has been considerable progress over the past few years in unraveling the molecular defects that give rise to insulin resistance, an early feature of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Nevertheless, there are many gaps in our understanding of the pathophysiology underlying insulin resistance. Our studies demonstrate that the bulk of IR gene expression in liver cells depends on functional and physical interactions among HMGI-Y, Sp1, and C/EBPß. Additionally, these observations consistently support the hypothesis that defects in the expression of these nuclear binding proteins may cause decreased IR expression and induce insulin resistance. Together, these new findings provide further insight into the molecular processes regulating IR gene expression and open up new avenues for understanding the causes of insulin resistance syndromes and other pathological states in humans with IR dysfunction and impairment of insulin signaling and action.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank K.-S. Chang, M. A. Lazar, G. Manfioletti, T. Maniatis, T. M. Penning, H. Rotheneder, G. Suske, D. Thanos, R. Tjian, and E. Wintersberger for providing reagents. Special thanks go to L. Levintow for critical reading of the manuscript.
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
2. Brunetti, A., L. Brunetti, D. Foti, D. Accili, and I. D. Goldfine. 1996. Human diabetes associated with defects in nuclear regulatory proteins for the insulin receptor gene. J. Clin. Investig. 97:258-262.[Medline]
3. Brunetti, A., G. Manfioletti, E. Chiefari, I. D. Goldfine, and D. Foti. 2001. Transcriptional regulation of human insulin receptor gene by the high-mobility group protein HMGI-Y. FASEB J. 15:492-500.
4. Bruning, J. C., D. Gautam, D. J. Burks, J. Gillette, M. Schubert, P. C. Orban, R. Klein, W. Krone, D. Muller-Wieland, and C. R. Kahn. 2000. Role of brain insulin receptor in control of body weight and reproduction. Science 289:2122-2125.
5. Bustin, M., and R. Reeves. 1996. High-mobility-group proteins: architectural components that facilitate chromatin function. Prog. Nucleic Acids Res. 54:35-100.
6. Faggioli, L., C. Costanzo, M. Merola, E. Bianchini, A. Furia, A. Carsana, and M. Palmieri. 1996. Nuclear factor kB (NF-kB), nuclear factor interleukin-6 (NFIL-6 or C/EBPß) and nuclear factor interleukin-6ß (NFIL6-ß or C/EBP
) are not sufficient to activate the endogenous interleukin-6 gene in the human breast carcinoma cell line MCF-7. Eur. J. Biochem. 239:624-631.[Medline]
7. Friedman, A. D., W. H. Landschulz, and S. L. McKnight. 1989. CCAAT/enhancer binding protein activates the promoter of the serum albumin gene in culture hepatoma cells. Genes Dev. 3:1314-1322.
8. Giddings, S. J., and L. R. Carnaghi. 1992. Insulin receptor gene expression during development: developmental regulation of insulin receptor mRNA abundance in embryonic rat liver and yolk sac, developmental regulation of insulin receptor gene splicing, and comparison to abundance of insulin-like growth factor I receptor mRNA. Mol. Endocrinol. 6:1665-1672.[Abstract]
9. Grosschedl, R. 1995. Higher-order nucleoprotein complexes in transcription: analogies with site-specific recombination. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 7:362-370.[CrossRef][Medline]
10. Heinemeyer, T., E. Wingender, I. Reuter, H. Hermjakob, A. Kel, O. Kel, E. Ignatieva, E. Ananko, O. Podkolodnaya, F. Kolpakov, N. Podkolodny, and N. Kolchanov. 1998. Databases on transcriptional regulation: TRANSFAC, TRRD, and COMPEL. Nucleic Acids Res. 26:364-370.
11. Ho, S. N., H. D. Hunt, R. M. Horton, J. K. Pullen, and L. R. Pease. 1989. Site-directed mutagenesis by overlap extension using the polymerase chain reaction. Gene 77:51-59.[CrossRef][Medline]
12. Jiang, M. S., and M. D. Lane. 2000. Sequential repression and activation of the CCAAT enhancer-binding protein-
(C/EBP
) gene during adipogenesis. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 97:12519-12523.
13. Johnson, P. F., and S. C. Williams. 1994. CCAAT/enhancer binding (C/EBP) proteins, p. 771-795. In F. Tronche and M. Yaniv (ed.), Liver gene expression. R. G. Landes Co., Austin, Tex.
14. Kahn, C. R. 1985. The molecular mechanisms of insulin action. Annu. Rev. Med. 36:429-451.[CrossRef][Medline]
15. Lai, J. S., and W. Herr. 1992. Ethidium bromide provides a simple tool for identifying genuine DNA-independent protein associations. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 89:6958-6962.
16. Lee, Y. H., S. C. Williams, M. Baer, E. Stemeck, F. J. Gonzalez, and P. F. Johnson. 1997. The ability of C/EBPß but not C/EBP
to synergize with an Sp1 protein is specified by the leucine zipper and activation domain. Mol. Cell. Biol. 17:2038-2047.[Abstract]
17. Liu, S., C. Croniger, C. Arizmendi, M. Harada-Shiba, J. Ren, V. Poli, R. W. Hanson, and J. E. Friedman. 1999. Hypoglycemia and impaired hepatic glucose production in mice with a deletion of the C/EBPß gene. J. Clin. Investig. 103:207-213.[Medline]
18. Liu, Y., X. Zhong, W. Li, M. G. Brattain, and S. S. Banerji. 2000. The role of Sp1 in the differential expression of transforming growth factor-ß receptor type II in human breast adenocarcinoma MCF-7 cells. J. Biol. Chem. 275:12231-12236.
19. Lopez-Rodriguez, C., L. Botella, and A. L. Corbi. 1997. CCAAT-enhancer binding proteins (C/EBP) regulate the tissue specific activity of the CD11c integrin promoter through functional interactions with Sp1 proteins. J. Biol. Chem. 272:29120-29126.
20. Mamula, P. W., A. R. McDonald, A. Brunetti, Y. Okabayashi, K. Y. Wong, B. A. Maddux, C. Logsdon, and I. D. Goldfine. 1990. Regulating insulin-receptor-gene expression by differentiation and hormones. Diabetes Care 13:288-301.[Abstract]
21. Mandrup, S., and M. D. Lane. 1997. Regulating adipogenesis. J. Biol. Chem. 272:5367-5370.
22. Maniatis, T., J. V. Falvo, T. H. Kim, T. K. Kim, C. H. Lin, B. S. Parekh, and M. G. Wathelet. 1998. Structure and function of the interferon ß enhanceosome. Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol. 63:609-620.
23. Martin, B., A. Vaquero, W. Priebe, and J. Portugal. 1999. Bisanthracycline WP631 inhibits basal and Sp1-activated transcription initiation in vitro. Nucleic Acids Res. 27:3402-3409.
24. Melillo, R. M., G. M. Pierantoni, S. Scala, S. Battista, M. Fedele, A. Stella, M. C. De Biasio, G. Chiappetta, V. Fidanza, G. Condorelli, M. Santoro, C. M. Croce, G. Viglietto, and A. Fusco. 2001. Critical role of the HMGI-Y proteins in adipocytic cell growth and differentiation. Mol. Cell. Biol. 21:2485-2495.
25. Merika, M., and D. Thanos. 2001. Enhanceosomes. Curr. Opin. Genet. Dev. 11:205-208.[CrossRef][Medline]
26. Milos, P. M., and K. S. Zaret. 1992. A ubiquitous factor is required for C/EBP-related proteins to form stable transcription complexes on an albumin promoter segment in vitro. Genes Dev. 6:991-1004.
27. Mitchell, P. J., and R. Tjian. 1989. Transcriptional regulation in mammalian cells by sequence-specific DNA binding proteins. Science 245:371-378.
28. Morishita, R., T. Sugimoto, M. Aoki, I. Kida, N. Tomita, A. Moriguchi, K. Maeda, Y. Sawa, Y. Kaneda, J. Higaki, and T. Ogihara. 1997. In vivo transfection of cis element "decoy" against nuclear factor-kappa B binding site prevents myocardial infarction. Nat. Med. 3:894-899.[CrossRef][Medline]
29. Quandt, K., K. Frech, E. Wingender, and T. Werner. 1995. MatInd and MatInspector: new fast and versatile tools for detection of consensus matches in nucleotide sequence data. Nucleic Acids Res. 23:4878-4884.
30. Queen, C., and D. Baltimore. 1983. Immunoglobulin gene transcription is activated by downstream sequence elements. Cell 33:741-748.[CrossRef][Medline]
31. Reeves, R. 2001. Molecular biology of HMGA proteins: hubs of nuclear function. Gene 277:63-81.[CrossRef][Medline]
32. Reeves, R., D. D. Edberg, and Y. Li. 2001. Architectural transcription factor HMGI-Y promotes tumor progression and mesenchymal transition of human epithelial cells. Mol. Cell. Biol. 21:575-594.
33. Saffer, J. D., S. P. Jackson, and M. B. Annarella. 1991. Regulation of Sp1 during mouse development. Mol. Cell. Biol. 11:2189-2199.
34. Saltiel, A. R., and C. R. Kahn. 2001. Insulin signalling and the regulation of glucose and lipid metabolism. Nature 414:799-806.[CrossRef][Medline]
35. Taylor, S. I. 1999. Deconstructing type 2 diabetes. Cell 97:9-12.[CrossRef][Medline]
36. Thanos, D., and T. Maniatis. 1992. The high mobility group protein HMGI-Y is required for NF-kappa B-dependent virus induction of the human IFN-ß gene. Cell 71:777-789.[CrossRef][Medline]
37. Virkamäki, A., K. Ueki, and C. R. Kahn. 1999. Protein-protein interaction in insulin signaling and the molecular mechanisms of insulin resistance. J. Clin. Investig. 103:931-943.[Medline]
38. Wegner, M., and F. Grummt. 1990. Netropsin, distamycin, and berenil interact differentially with a high-affinity binding site for the high mobility group protein HMG-I. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 166:1110-1117.[CrossRef][Medline]
39. Yie, J., M. Merika, N. Munshi, G. Chen, and D. Thanos. 1999. The role of HMGI-Y in the assembly and function of the IFN-ß enhanceosome. EMBO J. 18:3074-3089.[CrossRef][Medline]
40. Zheng, X. L., Y. Gui, K. A. Sharkey, and M. D. Hollenberg. 1999. Differential induction of nitric oxide synthase in rat gastric and vascular smooth muscle tissue: distinct tissue distribution and distinctive signaling pathways. J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 289:632-640.
This article has been cited by other articles: