Affiliation:
1. Department of Neuroscience, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 212051
2. Laboratory of Biochemistry, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, 2 and
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Several studies have characterized the upstream regulatory region of c-
fos
, and identified
cis
-acting elements termed the cyclic AMP (cAMP) response elements (CREs) that are critical for c-
fos
transcription in response to a variety of extracellular stimuli. Although several transcription factors can bind to CREs in vitro, the identity of the transcription factor(s) that activates the c-
fos
promoter via the CRE in vivo remains unclear. To help identify the
trans
-acting factors that regulate stimulus-dependent transcription of c-
fos
via the CREs, dominant-negative (D-N) inhibitor proteins that function by preventing DNA binding of B-ZIP proteins in a dimerization domain-dependent fashion were developed. A D-N inhibitor of CREB, termed A-CREB, was constructed by fusing a designed acidic amphipathic extension onto the N terminus of the CREB leucine zipper domain. The acidic extension of A-CREB interacts with the basic region of CREB forming a coiled-coil extension of the leucine zipper and thus prevents the basic region of wild-type CREB from binding to DNA. Other D-N inhibitors generated in a similar manner with the dimerization domains of Fos, Jun, C/EBP, ATF-2, or VBP did not block CREB DNA binding activity, nor did they inhibit transcriptional activation of a minimal promoter containing a single CRE in PC12 cells. A-CREB inhibited activation of CRE-mediated transcription evoked by three distinct stimuli: forskolin, which increases intracellular cAMP; membrane depolarization, which promotes Ca
2+
influx; and nerve growth factor (NGF). A-CREB completely inhibited cAMP-mediated, but only partially inhibited Ca
2+
- and NGF-mediated, transcription of a reporter gene containing 750 bp of the native c-
fos
promoter. Moreover, glutamate induction of c-
fos
expression in primary cortical neurons was dependent on CREB. In contrast, induction of c-
fos
transcription by UV light was not inhibited by A-CREB. Lastly, A-CREB attenuated NGF induction of morphological differentiation in PC12 cells. These results suggest that CREB or its closely related family members are general mediators of stimulus-dependent transcription of c-
fos
and are required for at least some of the long-term actions of NGF.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
468 articles.
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