Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Molecular Genetics, University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Lexington, Kentucky
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Multiple enhancers govern developmental and tissue-specific expression of the
H19-Igf2
locus, but factors that bind these elements have not been identified. Using chromatin immunoprecipitation, we have found two FoxA binding sites in the
H19
E1 enhancer. Mutating these sites diminishes E1 activity in hepatoma cells. Additional chromatin immunoprecipitations show that FoxA binds to E1 in fetal liver, where
H19
is abundantly expressed, but that binding decreases in adult liver, where
H19
is no longer transcribed, even though FoxA proteins are present at both times. FoxA proteins are induced when F9 embryonal carcinoma cells differentiate into visceral endoderm (VE) and parietal endoderm (PE). We show that FoxA binds E1 in VE cells, where
H19
is expressed, but not in PE cells, where
H19
is silent. This correlation between FoxA binding and
H19
expression indicates a role for FoxA in regulating
H19
, including developmental activation in the yolk sac and liver and postnatal repression in the liver. This is the first demonstration of a tissue-specific factor involved in developmental control of
H19
expression. These data also indicate that the presence of FoxA proteins is not sufficient for binding but that additional mechanisms must govern the accessibility of FoxA proteins to their cognate binding sites within the
H19
E1 enhancer.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
19 articles.
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