Publication | Open Access
Regulation of alpha-fetoprotein gene expression by antagonism between AP-1 and the glucocorticoid receptor at their overlapping binding site
102
Citations
44
References
1991
Year
Alpha-fetoprotein Gene ExpressionGeneticsGlucocorticoidGlucocorticoid ReceptorTranscriptional RegulationProtein ExpressionBinding SiteMolecular PhysiologyG Protein-coupled ReceptorAfp Promoter ActivityReceptor (Biochemistry)EndocrinologyGene ExpressionFunctional GenomicsCell BiologyTranscription RegulationAfp GeneSignal TransductionGene RegulationMedicineAfp Proximal Promoter
We show here that the alpha-fetoprotein gene (AFP) promoter can be regulated by AP-1 activity using transient transfection assays. AFP promoter activity induced by c-jun/c-fos can be repressed by cotransfected glucocorticoid receptor. The DNA sequence conferring AP-1 activity was located in the proximal promoter region. Gel retardation assays using the AFP proximal promoter identified an AP-1-like sequence which can bind to bacterially expressed c-jun protein. This AP-1-like element, when cloned into the tk promoter, responds to the AP-1 activity of c-jun/c-fos products in both CV-1 and F-9 cells. The element overlaps with a consensus glucocorticoid-responsive element which was shown to confer negative modulation of AFP promoter activity. A 23-base pair DNA element containing the overlapping glucocorticoid-responsive element and AP-1 sites can be positively regulated by glucocorticoid receptor in the absence of c-jun/c-fos products. When plasmids expressing glucocorticoid receptor, c-jun and c-fos are cotransfected together, they repress each other. Thus, these data demonstrate that negative regulation of the AFP gene by glucocorticoid may be due to the interference of AP-1 activity by glucocorticoid receptor either by direct competition for DNA binding or via protein-protein interaction. They provide another example of transcriptional regulation of developing-associated genes between two major signal transduction pathways in response to extracellular stimuli. This supports the model that expression of alpha-fetoprotein is regulated during development by the effect on transcription of antagonism between glucocorticoid receptor and fos/jun.
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