Publication | Open Access
Regulation of Lipocalin-type Prostaglandin D Synthase Gene Expression by Hes-1 through E-box and Interleukin-1β via Two NF-κB Elements in Rat Leptomeningeal Cells
41
Citations
56
References
2003
Year
ImmunologyImmune RegulationInflammationTranscriptional RegulationSignaling PathwayCell SignalingNeural CrestMolecular SignalingPromoter FunctionGene ExpressionCell BiologyGene FunctionCytokineSignal TransductionDevelopmental BiologyUnique GeneImmune Cell DevelopmentNatural SciencesRat Leptomeningeal CellsCellular BiochemistryMedicineLuciferase Reporter AssaysCell DevelopmentNf-κb Elements
The promoter function of the rat lipocalin-type prostaglandin D synthase (L-PGDS) gene was characterized in primary cultures of leptomeningeal cells prepared from the neonatal rat brain. Luciferase reporter assays with deletion and site-directed mutation of the promoter region (-1250 to +77) showed that an AP-2 element at -109 was required for activation and an E-box at +57, for repression. Binding of nuclear factors to each of these cis-elements was demonstrated by an electrophoretic mobility shift assay. Several components of the Notch-Hes signaling pathway, Jagged, Notch1, Notch3, and Hes-1, were expressed in the leptomeningeal cells. Human Hes-1 co-expressed in the leptomeningeal cells bound to the E-box of the rat L-PGDS gene, and repressed the promoter activity of the rat L-PGDS gene in a dose-dependent manner. The L-PGDS gene expression was up-regulated slowly by interleukin-1 beta to the maximum level at 24 h. The reporter assay with deletion and mutation revealed that two NF-kappa B elements at -1106 and -291 were essential for this up-regulation. Binding of two NF-kappa B subunits, p65 and c-Rel, to these two NF-kappa B elements occurred after the interleukin-1 beta treatment. Therefore, the L-PGDS gene is the first gene identified as the target for the Notch-Hes signal through the E-box among a variety of genes involved in the prostanoid biosynthesis, classified to the lipocalin family, and expressed in the leptomeninges. Moreover, the L-PGDS gene is a unique gene that is activated slowly by the NF-kappa B system.
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