Affiliation:
1. Department of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Sciences, University of Georgia College of Pharmacy, Athens, GA 30602, USA
Abstract
Understanding the regulation of transgene expression is critical for the success of plasmid-based gene therapy and vaccine development. In this study, we used two sets of plasmid vectors containing secreted embryonic alkaline phosphatase or the mouse IL-10 gene as a reporter and investigated the role of promoter elements in regulating transgene expression in vivo. We demonstrated in mice that hydrodynamic transfer of plasmids with the CMV promoter resulted in a high level of reporter gene expression that declined rapidly over time. In contrast, when plasmids with albumin promoters were used, a lower but sustained gene expression pattern was observed. We also found that plasmids containing a shorter CMV promoter sequence with fewer transcription factor binding sites showed a decrease in the peak level of gene expression without changing the overall pattern of reporter gene expression. The replacement of regulatory elements in the CMV promoter with a single regulatory element of the albumin promoter changed the pattern of transient gene expression seen in the CMV promoter to a pattern of sustained gene expression identical to that of a full albumin promoter. ChIP analyses demonstrated an elevated binding of acetylated histones and TATA box-binding protein to the promoter carrying regulatory elements of the albumin promoter. These results suggest that the strength of a promoter is determined by the number of appropriate transcription factor binding sites, while gene expression persistence is determined by the presence of regulatory elements capable of recruiting epigenetic modifying complexes that make the promoter accessible for transcription. This study provides important insights into the mechanisms underlying gene expression regulation in vivo, which can be used to improve plasmid-based gene therapy and vaccine development.