Affiliation:
1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Molecular Genetics, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095-1662
Abstract
ABSTRACT
C/EBP family members contribute to the induction of the interleukin-12 p40 gene and the genes encoding several other mediators of inflammation. Here, we show by chromatin immunoprecipitation that C/EBPβ binds the p40 promoter following lipopolysaccharide stimulation of peritoneal macrophages. However, three modes of C/EBPβ regulation reported in other cell types were not detected, including alternative translation initiation, nuclear translocation, and increased DNA binding following posttranslational modification. In contrast, C/EBPβ concentrations greatly increased following stimulation via MAP kinase-dependent induction of C/EBPβ gene transcription. Increased C/EBPβ concentrations were unimportant for p40 induction, however, as transcription of the p40 gene initiated before C/EBPβ concentrations increased. Furthermore, disruption of C/EBPβ upregulation by a MAP kinase inhibitor only slightly diminished p40 induction. Phosphopeptide mapping revealed that endogenous C/EBPβ in macrophages is phosphorylated on only a single tryptic peptide containing 14 potential phosphoacceptors. This peptide was constitutively phosphorylated in primary and transformed macrophages, in contrast to its inducible phosphorylation in other cell types in response to Ras and growth hormone signaling. Altered-specificity experiments supported the hypothesis that C/EBPβ activity in macrophages does not require an inducible posttranslational modification. These findings suggest that, although C/EBPβ contributes to the induction of numerous proinflammatory genes, it is fully active in unstimulated macrophages and poised to stimulate transcription in conjunction with other factors whose activities are induced.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Reference76 articles.
1. Agre, P., P. F. Johnson, and S. L. McKnight. 1989. Cognate DNA binding specificity retained after leucine zipper exchange between GCN4 and C/EBP. Science 246 : 922-926.
2. Akira, S., H. Isshiki, T. Sugita, O. Tanabe, S. Kinoshita, Y. Nishio, T. Nakajima, T. Hirano, and T. Kishimoto. 1990. A nuclear factor for IL-6 expression (NF-IL6) is a member of a C/EBP family. EMBO J. 9 : 1897-1906.
3. Alam, T., M. R. An, and J. Papaconstantinou. 1992. Differential expression of three C/EBP isoforms in multiple tissues during the acute phase response. J. Biol. Chem. 267 : 5021-5024.
4. Evidence for posttranscriptional regulation of C/EBPalpha and C/EBPbeta isoform expression during the lipopolysaccharide-mediated acute-phase response
5. Berrier, A., G. Siu, and K. Calame. 1998. Transcription of a minimal promoter from the NF-IL6 gene is regulated by CREB/ATF and SP1 proteins in U937 promonocytic cells. J. Immunol. 161 : 2267-2275.
Cited by
106 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献