|
|
|
Vol. 14, No. 21, pp. 2778-2794, November 1, 2000
-globin gene in erythroid cells of YAC transgenic mice
1 Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Cell Biology, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208-3500, USA; 2 Department of Cell Biology and Genetics, Erasmus University, Rotterdam 3000DR, Holland
| |
ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
We explored the mechanism of definitive-stage
-globin
transcriptional inactivity within a human
-globin YAC expressed in transgenic mice. We focused on the globin CAC and CAAT promoter motifs,
as previous laboratory and clinical studies indicated a pivotal role
for these elements in globin gene activation. A high-affinity
CAC-binding site for the erythroid krüppel-like factor (EKLF) was
placed in the
-globin promoter at a position corresponding to that
in the adult
-globin promoter, thereby simultaneously ablating a
direct repeat (DR) element. This mutation led to EKLF-independent
-globin transcription during definitive erythropoiesis. A second
4-bp substitution in the
-globin CAAT sequence, which simultaneously
disrupts a second DR element, further enhanced ectopic definitive
erythroid activation of
-globin transcription, which surprisingly
became EKLF dependent. We finally examined factors in nuclear extracts
prepared from embryonic or adult erythroid cells that bound these
elements in vitro, and we identified a novel DR-binding protein (DRED)
whose properties are consistent with those expected for a
definitive-stage
-globin repressor. We conclude that the suppression
of
-globin transcription during definitive erythropoiesis is
mediated by the binding of a repressor that prevents EKLF from
activating the
-globin gene.
[Key Words: globin; switching; transgenic; YAC; EKLF; DRED]
| |
Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The human
-globin genes are organized with the
embryonic
-globin gene located most 5', followed by the two
fetal
-globin genes (A
and G
), whereas the adult
- and
-globin genes are at the 3' end of the locus (Fig. 1A, top;
Stamatoyannopoulos and Neinhuis 1994
). The
-globin gene is expressed
during the first six weeks of gestation in primitive, nucleated
erythroid cells of the yolk sac, while the
- and
-globin genes
are silent. The first switch occurs when the site of erythropoiesis
shifts to definitive hematopoietic cells of the fetal liver, when the
-globin gene is silenced and the
-globin genes are concomitantly
activated. Gradually at around the time of birth, the site of
hematopoiesis changes once more to the bone marrow and spleen, where
the adult
-globin gene is transcribed and the
-globin genes are
reciprocally silenced.
The individual genes of the human
-globin locus are
developmentally regulated through their proximal promoters, although in
transgenic mice the expression of individual globin genes is usually
low and quite variable. This variability is due, in part, to
integration position effects, which can be overcome by linking the
genes in cis to the locus control region (LCR), a regulatory element composed of multiple DNase I hypersensitive sites (HS sites)
(Townes et al. 1985
; Chada et al. 1986
; Kollias et al. 1986
; Forrester
et al. 1987
; Grosveld et al. 1987
). Consequently, high-level,
position-independent expression is observed when the human
- or
-globin genes are linked to the LCR (Grosveld et al. 1987
; Enver
et al. 1989
; Behringer et al. 1990
). However, these experiments also
showed that the temporal regulation of individual LCR-linked globin
genes was compromised. Only when tandemly linked to the LCR were the
- and
-globin genes expressed at their proper developmental
stages, indicating that the fetal (
) to adult (
) switch is
controlled by promoter competition (i.e., competition of the two
promoters for a shared enhancer, in this case the LCR [Choi and Engel
1988
; Behringer et al. 1990
; Enver et al. 1990
]). We recently showed
that
-globin gene activation is also regulated competitively during
primitive erythropoiesis (Tanimoto et al. 1999a
). In contrast to
temporally inappropriate expression of the single
- or
-globin
genes, when the
-globin gene is joined to the LCR, it is both
activated and silenced autonomously (Raich et al. 1990
).
A priori, the
-globin gene could be silenced by two nonexclusive
mechanisms, one involving active transcriptional repression and the
other a simple lack of activation, in definitive erythroid cells. Many
previous studies focused on identifying negative regulatory elements in
the
-globin promoter and more 5' sequences (Raich et al. 1992
,
1995
; Peters et al. 1993
; J. Li et al. 1998
; Q. Li et al. 1998
). Raich
et al. (1995)
reported that mutating the combination of YY1 and GATA
factor binding sites in the distal promoter region of the
-globin
gene lead to its derepression in adult erythroid cells of transgenic
mice. However, when this putative silencer was deleted from a human
-globin YAC containing the whole locus, no derepression of
-globin transcription was observed in transgenic animals,
underscoring the critical need to analyze postulated regulatory
elements within the context of the entire locus (Liu et al. 1997
).
A second possibility is that the
-globin gene is inactive in
definitive cells simply because it lacks appropriate activating factors
that bind to its promoter region, an hypothesis that has not been
widely explored. The CAC element is found in erythroid as well as
many other genes. Each of the human
-like globin genes have one
(
- and
-globin) or two (
-globin) CAC boxes in their promoters (Fig. 2A). The critical nature of this element to
-globin transcription was discovered many years ago, when specific
human
-thalassemias were shown to be associated with mutations in
the proximal CAC box of the adult gene (Orkin et al. 1982
, 1984
). Several proteins interact with CAC sequences in vitro (Hartzog and
Myers 1993
). These include the ubiquitous transcription factor Sp1
(Gumucio et al. 1991
; Yu et al. 1991
; Hartzog and Myers 1993
) and the
erythroid Krüppel-like factor (EKLF; Miller and Bieker 1993
).
EKLF shows extensive homology to Sp1 and binds to the proximal CAC box
in the adult
-globin gene promoter with high affinity and can
activate
-globin transcription in vitro (Miller and Bieker 1993
;
Feng et al. 1994
).
Targeted disruption of the EKLF gene resulted in a thalassemic
phenotype leading to severe anemia and death at around 14 days post
coitus (dpc), thereby demonstrating an indispensable role for EKLF in
-globin gene expression (Nuez et al. 1995
; Perkins et al. 1995
).
The role of EKLF in human globin gene regulation was analyzed by
crossing transgenic mice carrying the human
-globin locus into the
EKLF-null mutant background (Perkins et al. 1996
; Wijgerde et al.
1996
). These experiments showed first, that the human embryonic
-
and fetal
-globin genes are expressed at normal levels in
EKLF
/
embryos, and second, that adult
-globin
transcription was undetectable. Thus, although all of the human
-like globin genes have potential EKLF-binding sites in their
promoters, the EKLF mutant studies concluded that only the adult
-globin gene is affected by EKLF loss of function in vivo.
The late time of death of the EKLF mutant mice (14 dpc) was initially
perplexing, because EKLF is expressed and functional in embryonic
erythroid cells (Southwood et al. 1996
). One plausible hypothesis for
why ablation of EKLF did not affect expression of the
- or
-globin promoters in primitive erythroid cells could be that their
CAC boxes are not functional binding sites for EKLF in vivo. In accord
with this hypothesis, it was shown that the CAC box of the adult
-globin gene has an eightfold higher affinity for EKLF than does
the
gene CAC box (Donze et al. 1995
). However, it was later shown
that this difference in binding affinity alone cannot explain the lack
of
gene activation by EKLF: When the 9-bp CAC sequence of the
-globin gene promoter was converted to the corresponding
gene
sequence, EKLF activated the two promoters equally (Asano and
Stamatoyannopoulos 1998
). Thus, the CAC sequence per se is not the sole
determinant of differential
-globin activation by EKLF. This
conclusion provided the intriguing possibility that transcriptional
output from EKLF-dependent binding sites might be contextually
dependent on nearby binding sites for other factors.
Our primary goal on embarking on this study was to determine why EKLF
does not activate the CAC site in the
-globin gene promoter during
definitive erythropoiesis and what molecular mechanisms regulate this
phenomenon. We presumed that these studies might also clarify why the
-globin gene is inactive in definitive erythroid cells. To address
these questions, we proposed to define what the
-globin promoter is
lacking for EKLF-dependent activation in definitive erythroid cells.
Our approach was to transfer specific binding sites from the
-globin gene that are known to be active at the definitive stage
into the
-globin promoter. We generated two different
-globin
promoter mutants, one containing the adult
-globin high-affinity
EKLF-binding site (E + CAC), and a second incorporating the same
mutation with a modified CAAT box, which even more closely mimics the
adult
-globin gene promoter (Bepsi). We found that both mutated
-globin genes continued to be expressed in definitive erythroid
cells, indicating that mutation of only 5 bp of the
-globin gene
promoter (E + CAC), even within the context of a 150-kb YAC, markedly
derepressed
-globin transcription. Surprisingly, when this same
E + CAC mutant promoter was analyzed in mice lacking the EKLF gene,
derepression was not abolished but was instead enhanced during
definitive erythropoiesis, demonstrating that the effect of the
modified CAC box on
-globin transcription is not mediated by EKLF.
In contrast, the increase in definitive erythroid-specific expression
from the combined CAC + CAAT mutant (Bepsi) was no longer observed in
mice missing EKLF; that is, this mutant surprisingly adopted EKLF
dependence in the presence of a second mutation adjacent to the CAC
sequence. We conclude that the detailed arrangement of cis
regulatory elements within the
-globin promoter mediate its EKLF
responsiveness through a stage-specific silencing mechanism.
| |
Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
EKLF activates
-globin transcription in primitive and
definitive erythroid cells
Previous work showed that EKLF is indispensable for adult
-globin gene transcription in definitive murine fetal liver
erythroid cells. The same studies showed that EKLF is not required for
- or
-globin gene expression in primitive erythroid cells of the embryonic yolk sac (Perkins et al. 1996
; Wijgerde et al. 1996
), although it is present and active during the primitive stage (Southwood et al. 1996
; Tewari et al. 1998
). We wished to first confirm that EKLF
is active in the embryonic yolk sac, and then second, to test whether
or not EKLF was required for activation of the
-globin gene in the
yolk sac environment.
Previously, we generated transgenic mice in which the globin genes were
inverted with respect to the LCR (Fig. 1A)
and found that the adult
-globin gene in the inverted locus is
expressed abundantly in primitive cells (Tanimoto et al. 1999a
). To
test whether embryonic expression of the adult
-globin gene
requires EKLF, we bred the inverted human
-globin YAC transgene
into the EKLF-null mutant background and analyzed globin mRNA
expression by semiquantitative RT-PCR. In the locus-inverted
transgenes, activation of the adult
-globin and suppression of the
fetal
-globin genes during the primitive stage (in the 9.5-day yolk sac) is regulated by EKLF in a gene dosage-dependent manner (Fig. 1B).
We detect a similar dependence on EKLF for regulation of the adult
-globin gene during the fetal liver stage in mice bearing the
wild-type locus (Fig. 1C). The reciprocal increase in expression of the
-globin genes (presumably caused by competition) is more dramatic in
the wild type than in the genes-inverted locus. These results confirm
that EKLF is active in primitive erythroid cells of the embryonic yolk
sac and that it is essential for adult
-globin transcription in
the embryonic erythroid environment, in accord with previous
conclusions (Guy et al. 1998
).
|
EKLF is required for efficient
-globin transcription in the
embryonic yolk sac
We next examined the requirement for EKLF on primitive erythroid
-globin transcription in transgenic mice. In homozygous EKLF-null
mutant mice, the
-globin transcript level declined precipitously (by
60%-70%) when compared with its transcription in controls (the
normal configuration of the transgene in a wild-type background),
demonstrating that EKLF is also required for full activation of the
-globin gene during the primitive stage (Fig. 1D,E). However, in
contrast to
-globin transcription, activation of
-globin
transcription is not EKLF-dose dependent nor is its effect on
-globin transcription as severe. These results imply that EKLF is an
essential factor for
-globin transcription during both the
primitive and definitive stages but that it plays only an ancillary
role in
-globin transcription in the yolk sac (Tewari et al. 1998
).
Generation of chimeric
-globin gene promoters
We found that EKLF is essential for both embryonic- and
adult-specific globin gene expression. Assuming that EKLF exerts its function through the CAC box present in the globin gene promoters, some
mechanism must allow EKLF to distinguish between these promoters during
development. Because small differences in the sequence of the CAC motif
cannot account for the difference in stage-specific expression of the
genes (Asano and Stamatoyannopoulos 1998
), we examined the broader
sequence context surrounding the CAC sites.
Previous studies showed that the integrity of the promoter-proximal CAC
and CAAT motifs is crucial for
-globin transcription (Myers et al.
1986
). When we aligned the human and mouse embryonic and adult
-type globin gene promoters with the CAAT site of the human adult
-globin gene (Fig. 2A), one clearly
distinctive feature was that the adult murine and human
-globin
promoters have a CAC site situated in a gene-proximal position, whereas
the position of the CAC elements in the
(and human
-globin)
promoters is more distal to the CAAT box. A number of human
+-thalassemias are associated with mutations in the
proximal, but not the distal, CAC site of the
-globin gene
(Treisman et al. 1983
). These observations lead us to suspect that the
spacing between the CAC and CAAT motifs (or between them and other
factor recognition sites in this region) might play a role in determining the
binding specificity of EKLF to the various globin gene promoters.
|
To test this hypothesis and, at the same time, to identify the minimum
requirement for the
-globin gene to be activated in definitive
cells, we generated two mutant promoters by substitution of adult
-globin promoter sequences into the wild-type
-globin gene. In
the first mutant, we changed five nucleotides between the distal
-globin CAC box and the CAAT box to create a new, more
-like,
proximal CAC box (Fig. 2B, called E + CAC), while maintaining
identical spacing to the wild-type
-globin gene. For the second
mutation, we substituted four additional nucleotides around the
-globin CAAT box into the E + CAC mutant, creating a more adult
-like CAAT sequence as well (Fig. 2B, Bepsi).
YAC transgenic mice with site-specific mutations in the human
-globin promoter
We introduced the two
-globin promoter mutations (E + CAC and
Bepsi) separately into the 150-kb human
-globin YAC (A201F4.3) using homologous recombination in yeast (Gaensler et al. 1991
; Bungert
et al. 1995
; Tanimoto et al. 1999b
). Successful mutagenesis was
confirmed by Southern blot analysis of YAC DNA (data not shown). We
then purified the two mutant YACs from pulsed field gels (PFG) and
injected them into fertilized mouse oocytes to generate transgenic animals. Tail DNA was prepared from offspring and screened using left
(L) and right (R) YAC vector arm-specific PCR primers (data not shown;
Bungert et al. 1995
). Offspring with both L and R YAC vector arm
sequences were then analyzed by detailed Southern blot hybridizations.
We generated three independent transgenic lines for each YAC (nos. 402, 408, and 418 for the E + CAC mutation and nos. 585, 588, and 590 for Bepsi). End-fragment analysis of thymus DNA recovered from each of these lines (Fig. 3A) revealed that four of the lines (402, 585, 588, and 590) carry single-copy YACs and that the other two (408 and 418) bear three copies (Fig. 3A,B). In E + CAC line 418, two end fragments were detected by both vector arm probes, one of which (R and L arm junction fragments) hybridized to both, indicating that the three copies had integrated in a direct head-to-tail repeat array. Further analysis using a fragment from the endogenous GATA-2 locus as a control confirmed this copy number analysis (data not shown).
|
In the YAC A201F4.3, the whole globin locus is contained within two
SfiI restriction enzyme fragments. One (10-kb) fragment contains LCR HS5 and HS4, and the other (100 kb) spans a region from
within the LCR (5' to HS3), including all the
-like globin genes (
,
, and
; Fig. 3C; Tanimoto et al. 1999b
).
High-molecular-weight DNA was prepared from the thymi of each line,
embedded in agarose, and digested with SfiI. After
pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and transfer, we used probes
spanning the locus and YAC vector arm (HS4-3',
-globin gene,
-globin gene, and the right arm, inside the SfiI site;
Fig. 3C) to detect either the 10- or 100-kb DNA fragments on Southern
blots. All of the probes detected single bands of the expected sizes in
all six lines (Fig. 3D), indicating that each carries intact,
unfragmented copies of the transgene.
The E + CAC mutation enhances
-globin transcription at
all developmental stages
To analyze the expression of the individual human globin genes in
transgenic mice, we performed multiplex semiquantitative RT-PCR as
detailed previously (Tanimoto et al. 1999b
). At least four independent
samples were analyzed for each line at the different developmental
stages (9.5-dpc yolk sac and 14.5-dpc fetal liver or adult spleen). The
expression level of each human
-type globin mRNA was internally
normalized to that of mouse
-globin and then divided by the
transgene copy number to obtain expression values per gene copy.
Intact, single copy wild-type human
-globin YAC transgenic lines
(31 and 42; Tanimoto et al. 1999b
) were used as the controls. In the
embryonic yolk sac, expression of the E + CAC mutant
-globin gene
increased three- to fourfold when compared with wild-type
-globin
(Fig. 4A, top). At the same time, expression of the
-globin genes declined to 30%-40% of their wild-type level (Fig. 4A, bottom), indicating (as expected) that both
the
- and
-globin genes are competitively regulated in primitive
stage erythroid cells (Tanimoto et al. 1999b
).
-globin transcription
from the E + CAC mutant promoter was not silenced in the fetal liver
(14.5 dpc; Fig. 4B, top) or the adult spleen (Fig. 4C, top), stages at
which the wild-type
-globin gene is normally undetectable, thereby
fulfilling one prediction of the original hypothesis under which this
work was initiated. However, the reduction in expression of the
competing
- (Fig. 4B, middle) and
-globin (Fig. 4B, bottom, and
C, bottom) genes in definitive erythroid cells was not as significant
as it was during the embryonic stage. This may be due to the fact that
the latter genes are normally highly expressed in the fetal liver and
adult spleen, respectively, and thus the
-globin gene is unable to
compete as effectively as it does in the yolk sac, where
-globins
provide the only competing promoters. This fact makes the observation
of continued
-globin transcription during both of the definitive
erythroid stages (fetal liver and adult spleen) even more significant,
as allochronic expression of
in these tissues takes places within
the strongly competitive definitive erythroid environment. Thus, the
5-bp E + CAC mutation in the
-globin gene promoter leads to a
significant increase in
-globin gene transcription during primitive
erythropoiesis and derepresses its transcription during definitive
erythropoiesis.
|
Derepression of
-globin transcription by the E + CAC mutant
promoter during definitive erythropoiesis is EKLF independent
Because the effect of the E + CAC mutation was to increase
expression of the
-globin gene at all erythroid developmental stages, we suspected that positive factors, such as Sp1 or EKLF, might
be recruited to the newly generated proximal CAC site in a
developmental stage-independent manner. To test this hypothesis, we
crossed two of the E + CAC transgenic lines with mice in which the
EKLF gene had been disrupted by germ-line gene targeting and then
examined the effect of the loss of EKLF activity on E + CAC mutant
-globin gene transcription. In the embryonic yolk sac (Fig.
5A), no significant difference in
mRNA
accumulation was observed in either EKLF heterozygous or homozygous
mutant backgrounds, demonstrating that EKLF does not enhance
-gene
expression from the E + CAC promoter during the primitive stage. The
fact that we did not observe any reduction in
-globin mRNA
accumulation from the E + CAC promoter mutant in EKLF-deficient mice
(in contrast to the dramatic reduction in
-globin transcripts in
EKLF mutant mice bearing the wild-type locus; Fig. 1D,E) demonstrates
that there is a significant EKLF-independent contribution of the
E + CAC mutation to the enhancement of
-globin promoter activity (see Discussion).
|
The E + CAC mutant
-globin gene is expressed at higher levels in
the fetal liver of EKLF mutant mice than it is in wild-type mice, as is
also true for the
-globin genes (Fig. 5B). Taken together, these
results show that neither the mutant
-globin gene promoter nor the
-globin gene promoters are EKLF dependent. One interpretation of
this result is that the lack of competition by the
-globin gene
(because of its requirement for EKLF) leads to an increase in
competitive expression of any genes that are expressed in an
EKLF-independent manner. Therefore EKLF appears to be effecting
globin gene switching by preferentially activating the
-globin
gene promoter in definitive erythroid cells, thereby competitively
suppressing expression of the (potentially active) mutant
and
wild-type
-globin gene promoters.
The Bepsi mutation activates
-globin gene expression in a
developmental stage-specific manner
Because we did not observe EKLF-dependent activation of the
E + CAC mutant promoter, we assumed that this mutant might be deficient (in comparison to the adult
-globin promoter) in some other way. Therefore, we next analyzed globin gene expression in the
second
-globin substitution mutant promoter that was even more
-like (Bepsi). The level of
-globin gene transcription in the
embryonic yolk sac was not significantly different in the E + CAC and
Bepsi mutants (Fig. 6A). However, in the
14.5-dpc fetal liver (Fig. 6B) we observed a 2.5- to 4.2-fold increase in
-globin transcription from Bepsi when compared with the E + CAC
mutant promoter, and the effect was even more pronounced in the adult
spleen (from 4.7- to 5.4-fold higher; Fig. 6C). Because both of the
mutants have identical CAC sites, definitive-stage-specific differences
in their activities must be attributable to the additional mutation
incorporated around the CAAT box in the Bepsi mutant.
|
Definitive stage-specific activation of the Bepsi mutant promoter is EKLF dependent
To determine whether the Bepsi mutant promoter was EKLF dependent,
we analyzed the Bepsi mutant YACs in the EKLF-null mutant background.
At the primitive stage (Fig. 5C), there was no difference in the level
of
-globin mRNA in the wild-type versus the EKLF-null mutant
backgrounds. We therefore concluded that the increase in
-globin
transcription of the Bepsi mutant (in comparison to the wild-type
locus) does not require primitive-stage EKLF activity. We anticipated
this result because the E + CAC promoter, which has similar activity
to Bepsi in primitive cells, is also EKLF independent (Fig. 5A).
However, in definitive fetal liver erythroid cells, we found that Bepsi
promoter activity (which is much more active than the E + CAC
promoter at this stage; Fig. 6B) was now strongly EKLF dependent (Fig.
5D). As
-globin mRNA diminished in the EKLF-null mutant
background,
gene expression increased significantly, whereas
expression decreased by 30%-40%. Because
-globin transcription in
the E + CAC mutant locus increases by ~fourfold in EKLF-null mice
in the definitive fetal liver (Fig. 5B), diminished
-globin
accumulation in the Bepsi mutant at the same stage gains added
significance. Because expression of the E + CAC and Bepsi mutants in
the absence of EKLF is almost identical during both the yolk sac and
fetal liver stages, we conclude that the activation of Bepsi above that
of the E + CAC promoter during definitive erythropoiesis is
absolutely dependent on EKLF activity. Thus in contrast to the
E + CAC mutant, which is not directly affected by EKLF loss in
definitive cells, the additional CAAT mutation in the mutant
-globin
promoter now confers EKLF responsiveness. These data show that the
context of the CAC-binding site, rather than its sequence, confers the
specificity for binding of the EKLF protein to the
-type globin genes.
The E + CAC and Bepsi mutants bind to transcription factors that
interact with the adult
-globin gene promoter
To begin to decipher specific nuclear factor requirements for the
recruitment of EKLF to the Bepsi mutant promoter, we conducted EMSA.
First, we determined whether the two mutant
-globin promoter fragments were capable of binding to factors that normally interact with the adult
-globin gene promoter. The radiolabeled probe corresponded to sequences in the proximal promoter of the
-globin gene (Beta, Fig. 7A, bottom), whereas
various subfragments of the wild-type and mutant promoters were used as
competitors (Fig. 7A). The
-proximal fragment binds to virtually
an identical set of proteins in both human K562 (primitive) and murine
MEL (definitive) erythroid cells (Fig. 7B,C). These binding proteins
include CP-1/NF-Y (Fig. 7B, lane 16) and Sp1 (Fig. 7B, lanes 7,8 and
7C, lanes 8,15), in good agreement with previous reports (Hartzog and
Myers 1993
; Gillemans et al. 1998
). A fragment corresponding to the
proximal promoter of the wild-type
-globin gene (Epsi) failed to
compete for the binding of these factors (Fig. 7B,C, lanes 3), whereas both of the mutant sequences (E + CAC and Bepsi) efficiently compete for Sp1, but not for CP-1/NF-Y. Sp1 binds to the proximal CAC site of
the Beta fragment (Fig. 7B,C, lanes 11 and 14, respectively). Although
the distal CAC site of
-globin can efficiently compete for Sp1
binding (Epsi distal; Fig. 7B,C, lanes 12), the distal CAC site of the
adult
promoter does not (Beta distal; Fig. 7B,C, lanes 13).
Inclusion of an antibody to CP-1/NF-Y eliminated the formation of the
anticipated DNA/protein complex (Fig. 7B, lane 16;
CP-1/NF-Y).
Although CP-1/NF-Y was originally identified as a CCAAT box-binding
protein, neither competition with the
- or
-globin CAAT
sequences had any effect on complex formation (Fig. 7B, lanes 14,15 and
7C, lane 14). An antibody recognizing SP-1 interfered with the
formation of both the CP-1/NF-Y and SP-1 complexes (Fig. 7B, lane 8 and
7C, lane15) whereas a consensus sequence for Sp1 was unable to compete
for CP-1/NF-Y binding (Fig. 7B, lane 7 and 7C, lane 8). The reason for
this disparity is unclear.
|
Because EKLF gel shifts are partially obscured by Sp1 binding (Fig. 7C,
lanes 16,17; see also Gillemans et al. 1998
), we expressed EKLF in
Escherichia coli as a GST-fusion protein (Bieker and Southwood 1995
) to analyze the binding characteristics of EKLF to the various globin CAC sequences (Fig. 7D). The proximal
-globin CAC sequence was used as a high affinity EKLF binding site, and other globin promoter fragments were used as competitors. Specific binding of EKLF
to the probe (lane 2) was disrupted by competition with Beta (lane 7)
but not Epsi (lane 4). EKLF binds efficiently to both mutant
-globin
promoter CAC boxes (E + CAC and Bepsi, lanes 5,6,8-10). The distal
CAC elements of both the
- and
-globin promoters have lower
affinity for EKLF than does the proximal
promoter CAC sequence
(lanes 10-12, and data not shown). In summary, both E + CAC and
Bepsi sequences bind to the same array of proteins that also interact
with the adult
-globin gene promoter, including Sp1 and EKLF.
Although this may explain why both the E + CAC and Bepsi promoters
are activated in a developmental stage independent manner (because the
-globin promoter is potentially active in both primitive and
definitive cells), these data do not explain why the E + CAC and
Bepsi promoters have different activities and display a different
dependence on EKLF in definitive erythroid cells.
E + CAC, but not Bepsi, binds to a definitive erythroid direct repeat nuclear factor
Filipe et al. (1999)
recently reported that a putative repressor
protein, COUP-TFII, can bind to two sites in the
-globin promoter
(Fig. 2B). To determine whether the introduction of new sequences into
the mutant
-promoter fragments might have disrupted these sites, we
performed additional EMSA experiments using the wild-type
-globin
promoter as a probe (Epsi; Fig. 8A, top).
Incubation of the Epsi probe with K562 extracts led to the formation of
one major and several minor complexes (Fig. 8B, lane 2). The major complex was eliminated by the RARE sequence (a strong COUP-TFII binding consensus; Fig. 8B, lane 13) and was supershifted by
anti-COUP-TFII antibody (Fig. 8B, lane 14), confirming that this
complex involves COUP-TFII. The corresponding region from the
-globin gene promoter (Beta; Fig. 8A, bottom) failed to compete
(Fig. 8B, lane 6), confirming that COUP-TFII does not bind to the
wild-type
-globin gene promoter.
|
The
-globin promoter contains two binding sites for COUP-TFII
(Filipe et al. 1999
), one in a gene proximal position and the other
overlapping the CAAT box (shown as open arrows in Fig. 8A). Each of
these sites is comprised of a direct repeat sequence, AGGTCA, referred
to as the DR (direct repeat; Glass 1994
, no. 3334). Introduction of the
CAC box into the proximal
-globin promoter position destroys one DR
consensus site, thereby disrupting the binding of COUP-TFII to that
element (Fig. 8B, lane 8). The E + CAC fragment (Fig. 8A) can still
bind to the COUP-TFII factor because of the second DR left intact in
the Epsi probe (Epsi CAAT, Fig. 8B, lane 10). However, when the
combined CAC and CAAT boxes in the Bepsi mutant were examined (in which
both DR elements are mutated, Fig. 8B, lane 5), we found that
COUP-TFII no longer bound. Although this could theoretically account
for the difference between the E + CAC and Bepsi promoter activities,
it does not, as COUP-TFII is not expressed in definitive erythroid
cells (Filipe et al. 1999
).
Because the difference in COUP-TFII binding cannot account for the
divergent activities of the EKLF and Bepsi promoters, we next asked
whether we could identify definitive stage-specific factors that could
interact with the wild-type
-globin gene promoter. We found that one
major protein complex is formed on the wild-type
-globin promoter
when incubated with MEL cell extracts (Fig. 8C, lane 2), and it
exhibits a decidedly different mobility than the complex formed by
COUP-TFII (Fig. 8, cf. lanes 2 and 7). Antibody supershift experiments
confirmed that this definitive erythroid nuclear protein is neither
COUP-TFII (lane 6) nor CP-1/NF-Y (lane 5). Antibodies that
specifically recognize other nuclear hormone receptors (including RAR
,
, and
or RXR
,
, and
) also failed to alter
the intensity or mobility of this complex (data not shown; Materials
and Methods). This MEL cell-enriched factor, which we refer to as the
DRED (direct repeat
erythroid-definitive) protein, does not bind to
the
-globin gene promoter, as is also true for COUP-TFII (Fig.
8C, lanes 4,9). When the binding sites for the DRED protein were
examined in greater detail using many different competitors, the
results indicated that DRED binds to the identical repeat sequence as
COUP-TFII in the
promoter (Fig. 8D, lanes 9,12). Importantly, the
E + CAC or Bepsi mutant fragments either only incompletely disrupt
this binding or have no effect, respectively (Fig. 8D, lanes 4,5).
Because both the binding- and developmental stage-specificity of the
DRED protein fulfills requirements that might be expected of a
definitive erythroid repressor of
-globin transcription, this factor
may be responsible for
-globin promoter silencing as well as its
nonresponsiveness to EKLF in definitive erythroid cells (see Discussion).
| |
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The timing and cell-type specificity of transcription is regulated
by positive and negative regulatory cis elements in both gene-proximal (promoter) and -distal (enhancer, silencer) regions. An
additional factor regulating gene expression in a positional and
developmental stage-specific manner operates in multigene loci, where
the relative position of genes, both with respect to one another as
well as to shared regulatory elements, is critical (Ohtsuki and Levine
1998
; Kmita et al. 2000
). For example, we recently found that the adult
-globin gene can be ectopically activated at the embryonic stage
if the wild-type configuration of the genes is inverted with respect to
the LCR (Fig. 1B; Tanimoto et al. 1999a
). This result indicated that
all of the
-like globin genes are capable of activity at the
embryonic stage and that the gene order in the wild-type locus normally
inhibits
-globin from being expressed in primitive erythroid
cells. However, in the wild-type locus the
- and
-globin genes
are autonomously silenced at the definitive stage (Raich et al. 1990
;
Dillon and Grosveld 1991
), and therefore the adult
-globin gene is
the only active transcription unit.
To decipher the underlying molecular mechanisms responsible for human
-globin gene switching (developmentally regulated temporal control), we set out to identify specific DNA sequence elements that
confer definitive eythroid stage expression. We principally focused on
the EKLF protein and its binding site, the CAC cis element,
because they are the only species known to be essential for
definitive-stage-specific expression of the
-globin gene. For the
initial strategy, we aligned the proximal promoter regions of all the
human and murine
-type globin genes. The wild-type genes expressed
in definitive cells all have a CAC box in a position proximal to the
(globin) ubiquitous CAAT box (Fig. 2A). Because natural mutations that
severely affect adult
-globin gene expression in adults are often
found in the gene-proximal CAC element (but never with the distal CAC
box), we assumed a priori that this motif was important for
definitive-specific expression. To test this hypothesis, we first
created a high-affinity EKLF-binding site in the
-globin gene
promoter at the same relative position it occupies in the adult
-globin gene promoter. We found that the E + CAC mutant
-globin gene is expressed in definitive erythroid cells of human
-globin YAC transgenic mice. However, this elevated
-globin
mutant transcription was not stage specific;
transcription increased by three- to fivefold in the yolk sac, the fetal liver, and
the adult spleen.
One plausible explanation for the increase in activity of the E + CAC
mutant was that the modification creates a binding site for a positive
factor that is active at all developmental stages. The EMSA experiments
suggested that either Sp1 or EKLF could be that factor. Because
high-level
-globin transcription at all developmental stages is
mediated by EKLF binding to the proximal CAC site, we suspected that
the newly created CAC box in the
-promoter would also recruit EKLF.
Surprisingly, however, the E + CAC mutant gene did not differ in
expression when EKLF was removed by genetic manipulation (Fig. 5A).
Moreover, its activity was enhanced in the fetal liver in the absence
of EKLF (because the
-globin gene, which would normally compete
for LCR activity at the fetal liver stage, is not expressed in the
absence of EKLF; Fig. 5B). The results demonstrate that EKLF does not
mediate the enhanced expression from the E + CAC mutant
-globin
gene promoter.
A growing list of factors have been identified recently that are all
able to bind to CAC sequences; these related proteins are called BKLF
(Crossley et al. 1996
), GKLF (Shields et al. 1996
), LKLF (Anderson et
al. 1995
), UKLF (Matsumoto et al. 1998
) and FKLF (Asano et al. 1999
).
BKLF is expressed in erythroid cells at even higher levels than EKLF
(Crossley et al. 1996
). FKLF was isolated from fetal liver erythroid
cells and preferentially activates
- and
-, but not
-globin
gene promoters in primitive erythroid cells. It is therefore possible
that either BKLF or FKLF is responsible for the activation of the
E + CAC promoter in primitive cells of animals lacking EKLF, and we
can address this question once mice are available which lack these
transcription factors. Sp1-null mutant mice express endogenous
embryonic globin genes at slightly reduced levels (Marin et al. 1997
),
suggesting that the newly created proximal CAC site on the E + CAC
promoter might also recruit Sp1 to replace EKLF missing in the
EKLF-null mutant background (Fig. 5A).
It is formally possible that the introduction of the E + CAC site
into the
-globin promoter sim