A Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism in a Half-Binding Site Creates p53 and Estrogen Receptor Control of Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor 1

Author:

Menendez Daniel1,Inga Alberto2,Snipe Joyce1,Krysiak Oliver3,Schönfelder Gilbert3,Resnick Michael A.1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, NIH, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina

2. Molecular Mutagenesis Unit, National Institute for Cancer Research, IST, Genoa, Italy

3. Institute of Clinical Pharmacology-Toxicology, Charité-Universitaetsmedizin, Berlin, Germany

Abstract

ABSTRACT Interactions between master regulatory pathways provide higher-order controls for cellular regulation. Recently, we reported a C→T single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 1 (VEGFR-1/Flt1) promoter that merges human VEGF and p53 pathways. This finding suggested a new layer in environmental controls of a pathway relevant to several diseases. The Flt1-T SNP created what appeared to be a half-site p53 target response element (RE). The absence of information about p53 gene responsiveness mediated by half-site REs led us to address how it influences Flt1 expression. We now identify a second regulatory sequence comprising a partial RE for estrogen receptors (ERs) upstream of the p53 binding site. Surprisingly, this provides for synergistic stimulation of transcription specifically at the Flt1-T allele through the combined action of ligand-bound ER and stress-induced p53. In addition to demonstrating direct control of Flt1 expression by ER and p53 proteins acting as sequence-specific transcription factors at half-site REs, we establish a new interaction between three master regulatory pathways, p53, ER, and VEGF. The mechanism of joint regulation through half-sites is likely relevant to transcriptional control of other targets and expands the number of genes that may be directly controlled in master regulatory networks.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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