Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University, New York, New York
10027
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Although many E2F target genes have been identified recently, very little is
known about how any single E2F site controls the expression of an E2F
target gene in vivo. To test the requirement for a single E2F site in
vivo and to learn how E2F-mediated repression is regulated during
development and tumorigenesis, we have constructed a novel series of
wild-type and mutant
Rb
promoter-
LacZ
transgenic
reporter lines that allow us to visualize the activity of a crucial E2F
target in vivo, the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor gene (
Rb
).
Two mutant
Rb
promoter-
LacZ
constructs were used to
evaluate the importance of a single E2F site or a nearby activator
(Sp1/Ets) site that is found mutated in low-penetrance retinoblastomas.
The activity of the wild-type
Rb
promoter is dynamic, varying
spatially and temporally within the developing nervous system. While
loss of the activator site silences the
Rb
promoter, loss of
the E2F site stimulates its activity in the neocortex, retina, and
trigeminal ganglion. Surprisingly, E2F-mediated repression of
Rb
does not act globally or in a static manner but, instead,
is a highly dynamic process in vivo. Using neocortical extracts, we
detected GA-binding protein α (GABPα, an Ets family member) bound to the activator site and both E2F1 and E2F4 bound to the repressor site of the
Rb
promoter in vitro. Additionally, we detected binding of both E2F1 and E2F4 to the
Rb
promoter in
vivo using chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis on embryonic day 13.5
brain. Unexpectedly, we detect no evidence for
Rb
promoter
autoregulation in neuroendocrine tumors from
Rb
+/
−
;
RbP-LacZ
mice that undergo loss of heterozygosity at the
Rb
locus, in contrast to the situation in human
retinoblastomas where high
RB
mRNA levels are found. In
summary, this study provides the first demonstration that loss of an
E2F site is critical for target gene repression in vivo and underscores
the complexity of the
Rb
and E2F family network in
vivo.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
8 articles.
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