©1996 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Functional Characterization of DNA-binding Domains of the Subunits of the Heterodimeric Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor Complex Imputing Novel and Canonical Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Protein-DNA Interactions (*)

(Received for publication, December 29, 1995; and in revised form, January 31, 1996)

Steven G. Bacsi Oliver Hankinson (§)

From the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine and the Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, Medical School, University of California, Los Angeles California 90095-1781

ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
REFERENCES

ABSTRACT

The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) and the aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator (ARNT) belong to a novel subclass of basic helix-loop-helix transcription factors. The AHRbulletARNT heterodimer binds to the xenobiotic responsive element (XRE). Substitution of each of four amino acids in the basic region of ARNT with alanine severely diminishes or abolishes XRE binding, intimating that these amino acids contact DNA bases. Three of these amino acids are conserved among basic helix-loop-helix proteins, and the corresponding amino acids of Max and USF are known to contact DNA bases. Alanine scanning mutagenesis of the basic domain of AHR and substitution with conservative amino acids at particular positions in this domain and in a more amino-proximal AHR segment previously shown to be required for XRE binding (Fukunaga, B. N., and Hankinson, O. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 3743-3749) demonstrate that the most carboxyl-proximal amino acid position of the basic domain and a position within the amino-proximal segment are intolerant to amino acid substitution with regard to XRE binding, suggesting that these two amino acids make base contacts. Amino acid positions in these AHR regions and in the ARNT basic region less adversely affected by substitution are also identified. The amino acids at these positions may contact the phosphodiester backbone. The apparent bipartite nature of the DNA binding region of AHR and the identity of those of its amino acids that apparently make DNA contacts impute a novel protein-DNA binding behavior for AHR.


INTRODUCTION

The AHR (^1)mediates carcinogenesis by certain environmental pollutants, including the halogenated aromatic hydrocarbon, TCDD, and the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, benzo(a)pyrene (reviewed in (1) ). Prior to binding of ligand, AHR is located in the cytoplasm as part of a complex that has a molecular mass of about 280 kDa. This complex is comprised of AHR, two molecules of the 90-kDa heat shock protein, and possibly other proteins(2, 3, 4) . After binding ligand, AHR dissociates from the above complex and translocates to the nucleus where it heterodimerizes with ARNT. The heterodimer of AHR and ARNT constitutes a transcription factor referred to as the transformed AHR complex, which stimulates the synthesis of the CYPlAl protein and several other proteins involved in xenobiotic metabolism(5, 6, 7, 8) . Induction of CYPlAl is regulated exclusively at the transcriptional level(9, 10) . Activation of transcription occurs through interaction of the transformed AHR complex with several copies of short sequences, termed xenobiotic responsive elements (XREs) or dioxin-responsive elements, located within the 5`-flanking region of the CYP1A1 gene.

The AHR and ARNT proteins both contain bHLH motifs toward their amino termini(11, 12, 13) . Additionally, an approximately 300-amino acid PAS homology region is located more centrally in both proteins. PAS regions are also found in the Drosophila proteins PER and SIM (14) and the mammalian hypoxia-inducible factor lalpha(15) . PAS regions mediate homodimerization of PER and heterodimerization of PER with SIM (16) and are necessary for heterodimerization of AHR and ARNT(17, 18) . As well as possessing the PAS homology region, the AHRbulletARNT dimer differs from other bHLH bearing transcription factors in at least two other ways: (i) AHR activity is ligand activated and (ii) unlike most other bHLH-bearing transcription factors, whose DNA recognition sequence is the E-box sequence, CANNTG(19) , the AHRbulletARNT heterodimer recognizes an asymmetrical XRE sequence that only partially resembles the E-box. The consensus core XRE sequence is 5`-TNGCGTG-3`(20, 21, 22) . We previously determined the orientation of the AHRbulletARNT heterodimer on the asymmetric XRE sequence by UV light covalent cross-linking analysis. ARNT contacts the thymidine in the XRE core (5`-CGTG-3`), whereas AHR binds 5`-proximal to this(23) .

x-ray crystallographic analysis of four bHLH transcription factors (homodimers of Max, USF, MyoD, and E47) bound to their cognate DNA sequences has shown that protein-DNA interactions occur directly through the basic domain of each monomer (which manifests as an alpha-helical extension of the subunit's helix 1), whereas the HLH domain mediates intermolecular dimerization(24, 25, 26, 27) . We previously demonstrated corresponding requirements for the equivalent regions of AHR and ARNT by deletion analysis(17, 28) .

The two central nucleotides of the E-box and to a lesser extent the identity of the nucleotides flanking the invariant 5`-CA and TG-3` residues, dictate to which bHLH proteins the E-box will bind.(29, 30, 31) . Specificity for the central two nucleotides (typically CG or GC) is determined primarily by the identity of the amino acid located one helical turn toward the carboxyl terminus from a conserved glutamic acid residue in the basic regions of the bHLH proteins (found at position 36 of Max, see Fig. 3). When arginine is found at this position (as for example, in Max, USF, and TFEB), CG is preferred. When a smaller, nonpolar residues is present (as for example in AP4, MyoD and E12), GC is preferred(19) .


Figure 3: Comparison of basic regions of other bHLH proteins with basic region of ARNT and putative DNA-binding regions of AHR. The consensus sequence for bHLH proteins that bind the 5`-CACGTG-3` E-box is shown at the top. DNA contacts for Max (24) and for molecule 1 of USF (25) were determined by x-ray crystallography. Those for TFEB were inferred by alanine scanning mutagenesis(30) . Amino acids in the various basic regions (or nominal basic region in the case of AHR) that do not conform to the consensus are shown in red. The region of AHR immediately amino-terminal to its nominal basic region is shown at the bottom. m, mouse; f, frog; h, human.



The basic domain of ARNT conforms well to the consensus polypeptide sequence for this submotif, whereas the basic domain of AHR (which we refer to as its nominal basic domain) conforms poorly, consistent with the observation that the DNA recognition sequence for AHR is noncanonical for this class of transcription factors. In this paper, we have studied the basic domain of ARNT and the equivalent region of AHR, as well as flanking regions, in order to characterize the protein-DNA interactions of the AHRbulletARNTbulletXRE complex. Using an alanine scanning mutagenesis approach, we tested individual residues for XRE binding by performing EMSA. The alanine scanning mutagenesis approach was used, because (i) alanines confer alpha-helical secondary structure in polypeptide chains and alpha-helical secondary structure is manifested by the basic regions of solved bHLH proteins as they contact DNA and (ii) alanine lacks a reactive side group. Our results indicate that the mode of interaction of the basic domain of ARNT with DNA resembles that of other bHLH proteins. However, we provide evidence that AHR exhibits a pattern of DNA interaction that is novel for bHLH proteins. We find that XRE binding requires only the carboxyl-proximal portion of the nominal basic region of AHR. We previously demonstrated that DNA binding by AHR also requires a block of amino acids amino-terminal to the nominal basic domain(18) . By characterizing both alanine substitution mutations and certain conservative amino acid substitution mutations in both the above amino-terminal block and in the nominal basic region of AHR, we discriminate between amino acids positions that are less tolerant to substitution with regard to XRE binding and those which are more tolerant. The former may contact bases in the XRE, and the latter may contact the phosphodiester backbone. By peptide plot analysis and through informative mutant AHR proteins, we impute a non-alpha-helical structure for the extended putative DNA-binding region of AHR, further indicating the unique nature of the DNA-binding domain of this bHLH protein.


MATERIALS AND METHODS

Generation of ARNT Alanine Scanning Mutants

All ARNT constructs are presented in Table 1. The full-length ARNT construct pcDNA3bulletARNT was used for the generation of all ARNT mutants. ARNT alanine scanning mutants A(86-89), A(92, 95-97), A(103-106), R91A, N93A, H94A, E98A, R99A, R100A, R101A, and R102A were generated by the overlap extension method of PCR (32) using UlTma DNA polymerase (Perkin-Elmer). Briefly, oligonucleotides were synthesized to provide internal 5` and internal 3` primers containing complementary alanine codon substitutions in their 5` regions. These primers were used in conjunction with external 3` and external 5` primers, respectively, in a primary PCR reaction. pcDNA3bulletARNT was used as the template in the primary reactions resulting in alanine codon-substituted 5` and 3` PCR products. These products were used as templates for a second round of PCR in which the 5` and 3` PCR products linked together to form a full-length alanine codon-substituted product, which upon amplification with only the external 5` and external 3` primers resulted in the desired alanine codon-substituted product. The external 5` primer corresponded to pcDNA3 bases 839-871. The external 3` primer corresponded to the complement of ARNT bases 691-705. PCR products from the second round of amplification were digested with the restriction enzymes HindIII and ApaLI and subsequently ligated with the 899-base pair ApaLI-KpnI and 6443-base pair HindIII-KpnI fragments of pcDNA3/ARNT to produce the alanine-substituted forms of the ARNT protein. Amino-terminally truncated ARNT mutants NA89 and NA85 were generated using standard PCR reactions and primers that generated the desired truncation. PCR products amplified from pcDNA3/ARNT were digested with HindIII and KpnI and ligated with pcDNA3/ARNT fragments as described above for generation of ARNT alanine scanning mutants. All ARNT clones were sequenced to verify the mutation.



Generation of AHR Mutants

AHR constructs are presented in Table 2and Table 3. The full-length AHR construct pcDNA3/betaAHR described previously (18) was used for the generation of all AHR mutants. AHR alanine scanning and conservative amino acid substitution mutants A(27-29), A(40, 42), E28A, G29A, I30A, K31A, S32A, N33A, P34A, S35A, K36A, R37A, H38A, R39A, D40A, R41A, L42A, N43A, Y9W, Y9S, R14K, H38N, and R39K, were generated by the overlap extension method of PCR using UlTma DNA polymerase. The protocol for generation of the ARNT alanine scanning mutants was followed with these differences: (i) the internal primers were designed to generate either the desired alanine codon(s) or the desired conservative substitution codon; (ii) the template for the primary PCR reactions was pcDNA3/betaAHR; and (iii) a different external 3` primer was used in the primary and secondary PCR reactions. PCR products from the second round of amplification were digested with the restriction enzymes HindIII and Bpu1102I and subsequently ligated into similarly digested pcDNA3/betaAHR from which the corresponding HindIII-Bpu1102I fragment had been removed. AHR deletion mutants Delta17-26, Delta17-32, and Delta18-32 were generated by PCR using pcDNA3/betaAHR and primers designed to produce the desired deleted form upon amplification. Each AHR mutant clone was sequenced to verify the mutation.





In Vitro Transcription and Translation

All constructs, including the AHR and ARNT parent clones as well as their mutant derivatives, represent cDNA forms of each gene contained within the pcDNA3 expression vector in the appropriate orientation for in vitro expression from the T7 promoter. Constructs were expressed in the TNT T7 coupled reticulocyte system in the presence or the absence of [S]methionine (final concentration, 1 mCi/ml; specific activity, >1,000 Ci/mM; Amersham Corp.) according to the protocol provided by the supplier (Promega Biotech). Reactions were incubated at 30 °C for at least 90 min. Expression of each construct was assayed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of an aliquot from an incubation performed in the presence of [S]methionine. Following drying of the gel, quantitation of each construct's level of expression was performed with the aid of an AMBIS Radioanalytic Imaging System (AMBIS Inc.), which will henceforth be referred to as beta-scanning.

Dimerization of Mutant ARNT and AHR Proteins with Wild Type Partners

Full-length ARNT or its mutant derivatives were synthesized in vitro as described above, in the presence of [S]methionine, whereas AHR and its mutant derivatives were synthesized in the absence of isotope. Radiolabeled ARNT or a radiolabeled-mutant ARNT was mixed with an equimolar amount of AHR mutant derivative or AHR, respectively. The mixed proteins were incubated with 10 nM TCDD (dissolved in Me(2)SO to give a final concentration of 0.2% Me(2)SO) or solvent alone for 1.5 h at room temperature. Following this incubation, the mixture was adjusted to 25 mM HEPES, 1.2 mM EDTA, 10% glycerol, 200 mM NaCl, 0.1% Nonidet P-40, pH 7.4 (immunoprecipitation buffer). Affinity purified polyclonal antibody to a peptide corresponding to amino acids 12-31 of AHR (7) or the corresponding preimmune IgG fraction was then added, and the mixture was incubated at room temperature for 1 h. The resultant immune complexes were precipitated with protein A-Sepharose CL-4B beads (Pharmacia Biotech Inc.) for 1 h at room temperature. The immunoprecipitates were washed four times with immunoprecipitation buffer, whereas the supernatant fractions were precipitated with three volumes of acetone. Before subjecting each fraction to 7.5% SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, they were boiled in SDS sample buffer(33) . After drying, the gels were exposed to x-ray film and analyzed by beta-scanning to quantitate the level of radioactivity in each immunoprecipitate. The relative TCDD-induced dimerization capacity of each ARNT or AHR mutant was calculated as a percentage of the amount of radiolabeled wild type ARNT coimmunoprecipitated with wild type AHR in the same experiment. Mean values were calculated from three independent experiments.

XRE Binding

Wild type ARNT and AHR or their mutant derivatives were synthesized in vitro in the absence of isotope and mixed in equimolar ratios followed by incubation in the presence or the absence of 10 nM TCDD (in Me(2)SO to a final concentration of 0.2% Me(2)SO) or solvent alone at room temperature for 1.5 h. Each reaction was then adjusted to 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 200 mM KCl, 10 mM dithiothreitol, 10% glycerol, 5 mM EDTA, 50 µM of poly(dI-dC)bullet(dI-dC) (Pharmacia) and incubated an additional 20 min at room temperature. The reactions were then incubated another 20 min in the presence of a P-labeled double-stranded synthetic oligonucleotide containing mouse XRE1(7) . Protein-DNA complexes were examined by electrophoretic mobility shift analysis (EMSA) using 4.5% nondenaturing polyacrylamide gels in 1 times HTE buffer (200 mM HEPES, 100 mM Tris, 5 mM EDTA, pH 8.0). After drying, the gels were exposed to x-ray film and then analyzed by beta-scanning to quantitate AHRbulletARNTbulletXRE complexes. The value for each mutant AHR or ARNT protein was calculated as a percentage of the amount obtained with the corresponding wild type protein in the same experiment. Mean values were calculated from three independent experiments.


RESULTS

ARNT's Interaction with the XRE Resembles the Interaction of bHLH Proteins with the E-box Subclass CACGTG

In order to study the XRE binding role of each amino acid residue within and adjacent to the basic domain of ARNT, specific amino acid residues were substituted with alanine. Using EMSA, we previously demonstrated that incubation of in vitro synthesized ARNT and AHR, TCDD, and P-labeled XRE results in a specific gel-shifted band and that this band corresponds to the AHRbulletARNTbulletXRE complex, because it was not formed upon testing either protein by itself, its intensity was greatly diminished in the absence of TCDD and greatly reduced by the addition of a 100-fold excess of unlabeled XRE, and the band was unaffected by the addition of a 100-fold excess of a mutant XRE(17) . In the present study, we utilized equimolar amounts of wild type AHR and either wild type or alanine-substituted ARNT protein in the presence of 10 nM TCDD and quantitated the amount of AHRbulletARNTbulletXRE complex generated on subsequent EMSA with the aid of an AMBIS Radioanalytic Imaging System (referred to as beta-scanning). The value for each mutant was calculated as a percentage of that produced by the wild type ARNT protein in the same experiment. The average results for each ARNT alanine mutant, derived from data of three independent experiments are shown in Table 1, and representative autoradiograms of EMSA are presented in Fig. 1A.


Figure 1: XRE binding analysis of mutant AHR and ARNT proteins in combination with normal AHR and ARNT. Equimolar amounts of normal or mutant AHR proteins were mixed with normal or mutant ARNT proteins as indicated in the presence (+) or the absence (-) of 10 mM TCDD along with radiolabeled XRE, and EMSA was then performed. The resultant AHRbulletARNTbulletXRE complexes (open arrows) were resolved by nondenaturing 4.5% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The solid arrows indicate free probe. A, XRE binding analysis of ARNT alanine scanning mutant proteins. B, XRE binding analysis of AHR alanine scanning mutant proteins. C, XRE binding analysis of additional AHR alanine scanning and conservative substitution mutant proteins and XRE binding analysis of ARNT amino-terminal deletion mutant proteins.



x-ray crystallograhic analysis of the DNA-binding domains of several bHLH proteins when bound to DNA has shown that certain residues are not involved in DNA interaction (24-27, see Fig. 3). In order to test whether the corresponding amino acid positions within and flanking the basic domain of ARNT share this lack of DNA interaction, several mutants containing blocks of alanines substituted for the normal amino acids were studied. ARNT alanine mutants A(86-89), A(92, 95-97), and A(103-106) showed no significant reduction or increase in XRE binding when compared with wild type ARNT when tested by EMSA. These results indicate that the amino acids that are substituted in A(92, 95-97) do not contact DNA and that amino acids immediately amino-terminal (A(86-89)) or carboxyl-terminal (A(103-106)) to the basic region are also unlikely to contact DNA.

Four single alanine substitution mutant ARNT proteins (H94A, E98A, Rl0lA, and R102A) exhibited markedly reduced XRE binding of between 0 and 12% of that observed for wild type ARNT (p<0.05), indicating that critical XRE-protein contacts occur at these positions. Three other single alanine substitution ARNT mutants (R91A, N93A, and R99A) exhibited moderately diminished complex formation (between 40 and 75% of the wild type ARNT value (p < 0.05)), suggesting that these positions may also be involved in contacting the XRE. ARNT mutant R100A bound the XRE as efficiently as wild type ARNT. The conserved arginine residue at position 100 is therefore probably not involved in XRE-protein contact, as has been shown to be the case by x-ray crystallography for the corresponding arginine residue of other bHLH proteins contacting the E-box (see Fig. 3). These findings are summarized in Table 1and Fig. 3.

Each ARNT mutant with reduced XRE binding activity was tested for its ability to heterodimerize with AHR, because reduced levels of AHRbulletARNTbulletXRE complex formation could reflect diminished dimerization capacity rather than a direct effect on DNA binding. [S]methionine-radiolabeled in vitro synthesized mutant or wild type ARNT protein was mixed with an equimolar amount of unlabeled AHR in the presence or the absence of 10 nM TCDD. Following dimerization, the mixtures were immunoprecipitated using AHR antibody. The degree of heterodimerization for each mutant protein with wild type AHR was calculated as a percentage of the amount of wild type ARNT coimmunoprecipitated with wild type AHR. The first six lanes of Fig. 2A represent the controls for the coimmunoprecipitation assay. These reactions were performed with wild type AHR and wild type ARNT proteins incubated in the presence or the absence of TCDD and utilized AHR antibodies or the corresponding preimmune IgG fraction, as indicated. The results of the control reactions showed that TCDD treatment increased the amount of ARNT protein that coimmunoprecipitated with AHR and that very little or no ARNT was coimmunoprecipitated by the preimmune IgG fraction. Therefore, the coimmunoprecipitations were efficient, TCDD-inducible, and specific for AHRbulletARNT heterodimers. Each ARNT mutant performed as efficiently as wild type ARNT in the heterodimerization assays, demonstrating that the observed reductions in XRE binding ability represent altered DNA binding capabilities rather than decreased formation of AHRbulletARNT heterodimers.


Figure 2: Dimerization analysis of AHR and ARNT mutant proteins in combination with normal AHR or ARNT, respectively. The first six lanes of each panel represent control reactions. AHR antibody (Ab) was used in all reactions except in the fifth and sixth control lanes of each panel, where preimmune IgG was used. Equimolar amounts of radiolabeled ARNT or its mutant derivatives were incubated with normal AHR or its mutant derivatives as indicated below. Immunoprecipitated pellets and acetone supernatants were subjected to 7.5% SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. AHR, AHR antibody; PI, preimmune IgG; -, no TCDD treatment; +, TCDD treatment; p, immunoprecipitate; s, supernatant. The positions of the molecular mass markers are indicated on the left in kDa. A, dimerization analysis of the indicated radiolabeled ARNT alanine scanning mutants with normal AHR. B, dimerization analysis of the indicated AHR alanine scanning mutants with radiolabeled normal ARNT. (The eighth lane is derived from the same gel as the first seven lanes. A(40, 42) appears to migrate more slowly than the other AHR proteins because of the ``smile'' affect manifested in lanes at the ends of gels.) C, dimerization analysis of additional AHR alanine scanning and conservative substitution mutant proteins with radiolabeled ARNT and dimerization analysis of radiolabeled ARNT amino-terminal deletion mutants with normal AHR.



Analysis of ARNT Mutants with Deletions Amino-terminal to the Basic Domain

Two ARNT mutant proteins with large amino-terminal deletions were assayed to investigate whether XRE binding requires amino acids located beyond the basic domain in the adjacent amino-terminal portion of ARNT, as previously shown for AHR(18) . ARNT mutant NDelta89 was constructed by introducing a start (methionine) codon 5` to residue Ala, whereas ARNT mutant NDelta85 has a methionine start codon 5` to residue Lys. Each of the corresponding cDNA were expressed in vitro, producing proteins that expressed at levels equivalent to wild type ARNT and of the expected molecular mass (approximately 77 kDa). These mutants were tested as described for the ARNT alanine mutants in heterodimerization and XRE binding assays. The average results for the mutants, derived from three independent experiments, are shown in Table 1. A representative autoradiogram of the heterodimerization analysis is shown in Fig. 2C, and a representative autoradiogram of the XRE binding assay is shown in Fig. 1C. Both amino-terminal deletion ARNT mutants exhibited reduced levels of heterodimerization with AHR, amounting to approximately 50% of that observed for the wild type ARNT protein (p < 0.05). Their XRE binding activity was somewhat more adversely affected. Because we have shown previously that deletion of the first 70 residues of ARNT results in normal levels of both heterodimerization and XRE-binding (17) and because mutant A(86-89) is unaffected in DNA bindings, these results suggest that amino acids 70-85 are required for maximal dimerization and are also possibly involved directly in DNA binding. However, we cannot rule out the possibility that tertiary structural changes associated with these deletion mutant proteins are responsible for the results observed.

AHR-XRE Interactions Differ from Other bHLH Protein-DNA Interactions

A panel of AHR alanine mutants was constructed in order to study the protein-DNA interactions of the nominal basic domain of AHR (residues 24-39) as well as the adjacent amino-terminal region of helix 1 (residues 40-43). EMSA and heterodimerization assays were performed as described above using the mutant AHR proteins in conjuction with wild type ARNT. The average results from three independent experiments are presented in Table 2. Representative autoradiograms for EMSA (except for mutant P34A) are presented in Fig. 1B, and representative results for the heterodimerization assays for those mutants with altered XRE binding are presented in Fig. 2B.

A number of AHR single substitution alanine mutants (E28A, G29A, I30A, K31A, S32A, P34A, R37A, and D40A) formed AHRbulletARNTbulletXRE complexes to the same (or greater) degree as wild type AHR. Mutant P34A is of particular interest, because nearly all basic-helix-loop-helix proteins lack proline residues within their basic domains. Proline interrupts alpha-helical structure, and proline 34, being located at such a central position within the AHR basic domain, might be expected to have a significant role. However, our results show that substitution of this proline for alanine affects neither heterodimerization with ARNT nor XRE binding. Two mutants (H38A and R39A) formed complexes at less than 5% of the level observed for wild type AHR. Heterodimerization of these mutants with ARNT was not significantly different from wild type AHR in the case of H38A and was significantly higher than that for wild type AHR in the case of R39A. Thus the loss of complex formation observed with these mutants is not due to decreased heterodimer formation.

Six other AHR alanine single substitution mutants (N33A, S35A, and K36A within the basic domain and R41A, L42A, and N43A within helix 1) generated reduced levels of the XRE complex, ranging from approximately 28 to 69% of the wild type AHR value. None of these mutants heterodimerized any less efficiently with ARNT than did wild type AHR. Additionally, mutant A(40, 42), which contains the substitutions present in mutants D40A and L42A, formed the XRE complex at nearly the same reduced level as observed for the L42A mutant (approximately 38 and 28% of the wild type AHR value, respectively). Contrasting the result observed for this mutant is that of another double alanine substitution mutant, A(27-29), which generated the XRE complex at approximately 40% of the efficiency of the wild type AHR. Substitutions at positions Glu and Gly individually with alanine in mutants E28A and G29A, respectively, resulted in mutant AHR proteins that formed the XRE complex at undiminished levels. Although A(27-29) carries alterations in the peptide sequence to which the AHR antibodies were raised, it was precipitated by the antibodies as efficiently as AHR and therefore could be tested for its heterodimerization potential with ARNT. A(27-29) heterodimerized with ARNT as efficiently as wild type AHR. The unexpected reduction in XRE binding by A(27-29) compared with mutants E28A and G29A may result from the run of three alanines generated in the former mutant. This may alter the secondary structure of the protein (as discussed later), rendering the mutant less efficient at interacting with the XRE. A summary of the above findings is found at the bottom of Table 2.

Discrimination between Amino Acids of AHR That May Contact Bases in the XRE and Those That May Contact the Phosphate Backbone

In order to study the protein-DNA interactions of AHR with the XRE in greater detail, several additional AHR mutants were generated in which the amino acid substitutions represent conservative changes with regard to side chain and charge. Previous work has suggested that amino acid-DNA base contacts may be distinguished from amino acid-phosphate backbone contacts by analyzing the tolerance of a specific residue for conservative amino acid substitution(34) . If both alanine and conservative substitutions result in nearly or completely abolishing protein-DNA complex formation, the native residue is likely to be involved in a DNA base contact. If substitution for alanine results in a near or complete abolishment of complex formation, whereas conservative substitution results in close to normal levels of complex formation, the residue in question most probably contacts the DNA phosphate backbone. Four specific AHR positions were chosen for this analysis based on the markedly reduced levels of AHRbulletARNTbulletXRE complex formed when they were each individually substituted with alanine. Two of the substituted positions are located in the nominal basic region (residues His and Arg). Two (residues Tyr^9 and Arg^14) are located amino-terminal to the nominal basic region in a region unique to AHR among bHLH proteins that we previously identified as being required for XRE binding and that may directly contact DNA(18) . The two positions chosen in the amino-terminal region are the most sensitive with regard to XRE binding among several positions in this region that are adversely affected by alanine substitution. The substituted mutants were tested for XRE binding and for heterodimerization, as described above. The average results for three independent experiments appear in Table 3, and a representative autoradiogram showing EMSA and heterodimerization assays is presented in Fig. 1C and 2C, respectively.

All the mutants dimerized with ARNT as efficiently as wild type AHR. (Although Arg^14 contains a substitution within the peptide used to generate the AHR antibodies, mutation at this position does not affect its ability to be precipitated by the AHR antibodies(18) .) Substitution of the tyrosine residue at position 9 with either tryptophan or serine markedly reduced XRE binding activity (10 and 8% of the wild type AHR level of complex formation for mutants Y9W and Y9S, respectively). Substitution of lysine for arginine at position 39 adversely affected XRE to nearly the same degree as alanine substitution. These data suggest that DNA base contact probably occurs at Arg and also perhaps at Tyr^9 (if indeed the latter contacts DNA directly). Substitution of histidine 38 with asparagine affected XRE binding only mildly, suggesting that His probably contacts the phosphodiester backbone. Substitution of arginine 14 with lysine moderately affected XRE binding, indicating that this amino acid could make either base or phosphate contact or both (assuming that this amino acid contacts DNA directly).

A Spacer Region Is Required Between the Amino-terminal Block of Basic Amino Acids of AHR Required for XRE Binding and Its Nominal Basic Domain

Three AHR mutants (Delta17-26, Delta17-32, and Delta18-32) with deletions in their amino acid sequence corresponding to the residues between and including those designated in the name of each mutant, were generated to test the function of residues positioned between the nominal basic domain and a block of highly basic amino acids within the amino-terminal region of AHR required for XRE binding. When tested by EMSA, mutants Delta17-26, Delta17-32, and Delta18-32 all showed less than one percent of the level of AHRbulletARNTbulletXRE complex formation compared with wild type AHR (data not shown). Dimerization analysis with ARNT was not possible for these mutants because they were not precipitable by our AHR antibody. However, because analysis of other mutants indicate that this region is not involved in heterodimerization ( Table 2and (18) ), it is reasonable to assume that these deletions adversely affect XRE binding per se.


DISCUSSION

bHLH and bHLH leucine zipper proteins govern the expression of critical genes involved in growth control and differentiation through specific activation or repression programs. Regulation of transcription by these proteins involves their interaction with specific DNA recognition sequences in target genes. Most bHLH and bHLH leucine zipper protein-DNA interactions occur at the E-box sequence (5`-CANNTG-3`). The bHLH-PAS proteins, AHR and ARNT, heterodimerize in the presence of an activating ligand and then transcriptionally activate responsive genes, such as CYP1A1. The DNA recognition element for the AHRbulletARNT dimer, the XRE (5`-TNGCGTG-3`), is asymmetrical and only resembles an E-box at the underlined nucleotides.

DNA binding by HLH proteins requires formation of homo- or heterodimers. The HLH protein motif is critical for formation of these dimers. Secondary dimerization domains such as the leucine zipper of bHLH leucine zipper proteins or the PAS domain found in AHR, ARNT, hypoxia-inducible factor 1alpha, and SIM not only function as additional protein-protein dimerization interfaces but also probably serve as a means to determine the permissible combinations of homo- or heterodimers. In the case of ARNT, evidence is building that it represents one of the ubiquitously expressed bHLH proteins, which through heterodimerization with several other bHLHPAS proteins, is involved in the regulation of multiple genes. For example, the hypoxia-inducible factor 1alpha is a heterodimer of hypoxia-inducible factor 1alpha and ARNT. ARNT can also homodimerize in vitro and bind the E-box sequence, CACGTG, and can drive transcription of a reporter gene driven by same the E-box sequence(35, 36) .

Crystallographic studies of four homodimeric bHLH proteins complexed with their cognate DNA sequence show that in each case the basic domain of each subunit manifests an alpha-helical extension of helix 1 as it interacts with DNA through the major groove(24, 25, 26, 27) . We found a pattern of amino acid residue-XRE interactions for ARNT that are similar to those known for homodimers of the bHLH proteins, Max or USF co-crystallized with their target sequences (Fig. 3). Max and USF both bind the E-box subclass CACGTG, whose half site is identical to the segment of the XRE core sequence believed to be contacted by ARNT(22, 23) . We found a strong sensitivity to alanine substitution for ARNT residues His, Glu, Arg, and Arg. His, Glu, and Arg correspond in position to Max basic domain residues His, Glu, and Arg, which each make direct contact with DNA bases within the E-box (see Fig. 3). Our finding of high sensitivity to alanine substitution at these positions in ARNT suggests that these residues make base contacts within the XRE. The spacing of these residues in both Max and ARNT is significant in that it sets the alpha-helical register such that every fourth residue aligns to the same plane on the alpha-helix. Thus, all three residues can face into the major groove of DNA, enabling base interaction. Max residue Arg, corresponding to ARNT Arg, makes contact only with the phosphodiester backbone. ARNT Arg could be involved in a base contact, or it may contact the phosphodiester backbone and be particularly sensitive to alanine substitution. The moderately reduced levels of AHRbulletARNTbulletXRE complex formation resulting from substitution of each of ARNT amino acid residues Arg, Asn, and Arg with alanine suggests that these residues contact the phosphodiester backbone.

Introduction of a run of four alanine substitutions flanking the amino-terminal border of the basic domain in ARNT alanine mutant A(86-89) had no effect on AHRbulletARNTbulletXRE complex formation. These alterations fall within an alternatively spliced region of ARNT (11, 37) and demonstrate that Phe and Leu, which are located immediately adjacent to the basic region in the two alternatively spliced proteins, are insensitive to alanine substitution, consistent with the observation that both alternatively spliced products bind the XRE.

The putative XRE contacts of AHR are illustrated in Fig. 3. Two adjacent residues at the extreme carboxyl end of the nominal basic domain of AHR (His and Arg) exhibited high sensitivity to alanine substitution. When a conservative substitution to lysine was made for Arg, XRE binding was impaired strongly, suggesting that Arg makes base contact in DNA. Substitution of histidine 38 with asparagine had much less of an adverse affect on XRE binding than did substitution with alanine, suggesting that His contacts the phosphodiester backbone. Three other residues within the nominal basic domain (Asn, Ser, and Lys) and three residues near the amino terminus of helix 1 (Arg, Leu, and Asn) exhibited only moderate sensitivity to alanine substitution, suggesting that they may contact the phosphodiester backbone. Residue Ser presents the only potential target for phosphorylation within the nominal basic domain. This serine lies within a recognition sequence for phosphorylation by protein kinase C, and the reduced level of complex formation in the alanine mutant S35A could reflect a loss of the phosphorylation target, rather than presence of a phosphodiester contact. However, a recent study suggests that AHR is probably not phosphorylated in the amino-terminal half of the protein(38) . We further characterized the AHR-XRE interaction by extending the observations of Fukunaga and Hankinson(18) , who demonstrated that amino acids near the amino terminus of AHR, well removed from the nominal basic domain, are required for XRE binding. Two positions, Tyr^9 and Arg^14, at which alanine substitution abolished complex formation, suggesting possible DNA base contacts, and several other positions that were moderately sensitive to alanine substitution, suggesting possible phosphodiester contacts, were identified. We generated mutants in which we replaced Tyr^9 and Arg^14 with amino acids conservative with regard to charge and side group. The results from these mutants support the notion that amino acid residue Tyr^9 makes base contact but leave open the question as to whether Arg^14 contacts base(s) in DNA or the phosphodiester backbone. It is unlikely that tyrosine 9 is phosphorylated, because its site does not conform to any known phosphorylation recognition sequences. (It of course remains possible that the amino-terminal region of AHR does not contact DNA directly but plays some other role in DNA binding, such as directing the nominal basic region into the correct conformation for DNA binding).

A prominent feature both within the nominal basic domain of AHR and in the adjacent amino-terminal region is the presence of several proline residues. Proline residues affect the secondary structure of a protein by interrupting alpha-helices. Insight into the secondary structural nature of the nominal basic domain of AHR was provided by the data from two alanine substitution mutants. Substitution of alanine for the proline residue at position 34 did not affect AHRbulletARNTbulletXRE complex formation. Alanine substitution mutant A(27-29) exhibited significantly lower levels of complex formation than wild type AHR. A run of three alanines is created in this mutant that would not adversely affect alpha-helicity but could be detrimental to some other presently unidentified structural motif. In fact, a Garnier-Robson plot analysis (Generunner, Hastings Software) of wild type AHR's amino terminus through helix 1 (residues 1-60) identified no regions of predicted alpha-helicity, whereas both P34A and A(27-29) mutant proteins were predicted to have alpha-helical regions in the nominal basic domain as well as helix 1. Taken together, the above findings suggest a unique non-alpha-helical nature for the relevant region of AHR as it associates with DNA.

Certain other bHLH proteins contain proline residues in their basic regions and, like AHR, bind recognition sequences divergent from the E-box. These include E2F1, which binds the sequence 5`-GCGCGAAA-3` (39) and some heterodimeric transcription factors, including the Hes family of proteins which recognize the N-box (5`-CACNAG-3`) as well as the E-box (40, 41, 42) and enhancer of split, E(spl), which only binds the N-box(43) . E2F1 is particularly interesting because it contains a proline residues in a similar position in its basic domain as AHR. (In fact this proline is part of a proline-glycine pair, which is particularly disruptive of alpha-helix formation.) However, unlike AHR, binding of E2F1 to DNA does not require amino acids amino-terminal to its basic domain(44) .

In summary, we have provided evidence that ARNT interacts with the XRE in a manner highly analogous to several bHLH proteins that recognize the 5`-GTG-3` E-box half site, whereas AHR interacts with DNA in a manner unique among bHLH proteins. The putative DNA-binding region we have identified in AHR spans at least 35 amino acids, from Tyr^9 to Asn or beyond, and is composed of two highly basic blocks of amino acids separated by a 16-amino acid intervening sequence (18) containing four proline residues. The intervening amino acids may be critical for establishing a precise protein conformation, because deletion of this region resulted in a complete loss of DNA binding. These findings indicate that AHR possesses a novel DNA-binding motif among bHLH proteins. Ultimately, x-ray crystallography should definitively reveal the structure of the DNA-protein interaction between the AHRbulletARNT dimer and the XRE, whereas reports such as the present study and that of Fukunaga and Hankinson(18) , provide strong indications of DNA-protein contacts and also identify which interactions are essential for XRE binding.


FOOTNOTES

*
This work was supported by Grant CA28868 from the National Cancer Institute. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked ``advertisement'' in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

§
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, Box 951781, 8-684 Factor Bldg., University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1781. Tel.: 310-825-2936; Fax: 310-825-9433; oliver{at}lbes.medsch.ucla.edu.

(^1)
The abbreviations used are: AHR, aryl hydrocarbon receptor; TCDD, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin; ARNT, aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator; XRE, xenobiotic responsive element; bHLH, basic helix-loop-helix; EMSA, electrophoretic mobility shift assay; PAS, PER-ARNT-SIM homology region; PCR, polymerase chain reaction.


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Dr. M. Probst for providing the antibodies and for critical reading of the manuscript. We thank Dr. B. Fukunaga for assistance in designing the mutant proteins.


REFERENCES

  1. Hankinson, O. (1995) Ann. Rev. Pharmol. Toxicol. 35, 307-340 [CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  2. Perdew, G. H. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 13802-13805 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  3. Denis, M., Cuthill, S., Wilkstrom, A. C., Poellinger, L., and Gustafsson, J. K. (1988) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 155, 801-807 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  4. Chen, H.-S., and Perdew, G. H. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 27554-27558 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  5. Reyes, H., Reisz-Porszasz S., and Hankinson, O. (1992) Science 256, 1193-1195 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  6. Whitelaw, M. L., Gottlicher, M., Gustafsson, J. A., and Poellinger, L. (1993) EMBO J. 12, 4169-4179 [Abstract]
  7. Probst, M. R., Reisz-Porszasz, S., Agbunag, R. V., Ong, M. S., and Hankinson, O. (1993) Mol. Pharmacol. 44, 511-518 [Abstract]
  8. Pollenz, R. S., Sattler, C. A., and Poland, A. (1994) Mol. Pharmacol. 45, 428-438 [Abstract]
  9. Israel, D. I., and Whitlock, J. P., Jr. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 5400-5402 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  10. Gonzalez, F. J., Tukey, R. H., and Nebert, D. W. (1984) Mol. Pharmacol. 26, 117-121 [Abstract]
  11. Hoffman, E. C., Reyes, H., Chu, F.-F., Sander, F., Conley, L. H., Brooks, B. A., and Hankinson, O. (1991) Science 252, 954-958 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  12. Ema, M., Sogawa, K., Watanabe, N., Chujoh, Y., Matsushita, N., Gotoh, O., Funae, Y., and Fujii-Kuriyama, Y. (1992) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 184, 246-253 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  13. Burbach, K. M., Poland, A., and Bradfield, C. A. (1992) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 89, 8185-8189 [Abstract]
  14. Nambu, J. R., Lewis, J. O., Wharton, K. A., and Crews, S. T. (1991) Cell 67, 1157-1167 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  15. Wang, G. L., Jiang, B., Rue, E. A., and Semenza, G. L. (1995) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 92, 5510-5514 [Abstract]
  16. Huang, Z. J., Edery, I., and Rosbash, M. (1993) Nature 364, 259-262 [CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  17. Reisz-Porszasz, S., Probst, M. R., Fukunaga, B. N., and Hankinson, O. (1994) Mol. Cell. Biol. 14, 6075-6086 [Abstract]
  18. Fukunaga, B. N., and Hankinson, O. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 3743-3749 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  19. Littlewood, T., and Evan, G. (1994) Transcription factors 2: Helix-Loop-Helix , Academic Press, London
  20. Yao, E. F., and Denison, M. S. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 5060-5067 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  21. Lusska, A., Shen, E., and Whitlock, J. P. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 6575-6580 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  22. Swanson, H. I., Chan, W. K., and Bradfield, C. A. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 26292-26302 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  23. Bacsi, S. G., Reisz-Porszasz S., and Hankinson, O. (1995) Mol. Pharmacol. 47, 432438
  24. Ferré-D'Amaré, A. R., Pendergast, G. C., Ziff, E. B., and Burley, S. K. (1993) Nature 363, 38-45 [CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  25. Ferré-D'Amaré, A. R., Pognonec, P., Roeder, R. G., and Burley, S. K. (1994) EMBO J. 13, 180-189 [Abstract]
  26. Ma, P. C. M., Rould, M. A, Weintraub, H., and Pabo, C. O. (1994) Cell 77, 451-459 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  27. Ellenberger, T., Fass, D., Arnaud, M., and Harrison, S. C. (1994) Genes & Dev. 8, 970-980
  28. Fukunaga, B. N., Probst, M. R., Reisz-Porszasz, S., and Hankinson, O. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 29270-29278 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  29. Murre, C., McCaw, P. S., and Baltimore, D. (1989) Cell 56, 777-783 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  30. Fisher, D. E., Carr, C. S., Parent, L. A., and Sharp, P. A. (1991) Genes & Dev. 5, 2342-2352
  31. Halazonetis, T. D., and Kandl, A. N. (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad Sci. U. S. A. 88, 6162-6166 [Abstract]
  32. Higuchi, R., Krummel, B., and Saiki, R. K. (1988) Nucleic Acids Res. 16, 7351-7367 [Abstract]
  33. Laemmli, U. K. (1970) Nature 227, 680-685 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  34. Fisher, D. E., Parent, L. A., and Sharp, P. A. (1993) Cell 72, 467-476 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  35. Sogawa, K., Nakano, R., Kobayashi, A., Kikuchi, Y., Ohe, N., Matsushita, N., and Fujii-Kuriyama, Y. (1995) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 92, 1936-1940 [Abstract]
  36. Antonsson, C., Arulampalam, V., Whitelaw, M. L., Pettersson, S., and Poellinger, L. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 13968-13972 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  37. Li, H., Dong, L., and Whitlock, J. P., Jr. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 28098-28105 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  38. Mahon, M. J., and Gasiewicz, T. A. (l995) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 318, 166-174
  39. Nevins, J. R. (1992) Science 258, 424-429 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  40. Sasai, Y., Kageyama, R., Tagawa, Y., Shigemoto, R., and Nakanishi, S. (1992) Genes & Dev. 6, 2620-2634
  41. Ishibashi, M., Sasai, Y., Nakanishi, S., and Kageyama, R. (1993) Eur. J. Biochem. 215, 645-652 [Abstract]
  42. Akazawa, C., Sasai, Y., Nakanishi, S., and Kageyama, R. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 21879-21885 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  43. Tietze, K., Oellers, N., and Knust, E. (1992) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 89, 6152-6156 [Abstract]
  44. Jordan, K. L., Haas, A. R, Logan, T. J., and Hall, D. J. (1994) Oncogene 9, 1177-1185 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]

©1996 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.