(Received for publication, March 7, 1997, and in revised form, March 21, 1997)
From the Department of Biochemistry, University of Illinois, Chicago, Illinois 60612-7334
The hepatocyte nuclear factor-3 (HNF-3)/fork head homolog (HFH) proteins are an extensive family of transcription factors, which share homology in the winged helix DNA binding domain. Members of the HFH/winged helix family have been implicated in cell fate determination during pattern formation, in organogenesis, and in cell-type-specific gene expression. In this study we isolated a full-length HFH-3 cDNA clone from a human kidney library which encoded a 351-amino acid protein containing a centrally located winged helix DNA binding domain. We demonstrate that HFH-3 is a potent transcriptional activator requiring 138 C-terminal residues for activity. We used in situ hybridization to demonstrate that HFH-3 expression is restricted to the epithelium of the renal distal convoluted tubules. We determined the HFH-3 DNA binding consensus sequence by in vitro DNA binding site selection using recombinant HFH-3 protein and used this consensus sequence to identify putative HFH-3 target genes expressed there. These putative HFH-3 target genes include the Na/K-ATPase, Na/H and anion exchangers, E-cadherin, and mineralocorticoid receptor genes as well as genes for the transcription factors HNF-1, vHNF-1, and HNF-4.
Deciphering the mechanisms that lead to cell-specific gene
transcription is critical for understanding cellular differentiation during mammalian embryogenesis. Differential expression of protein encoding genes occurs at the point of transcriptional initiation (1)
and involves the assembly of several well characterized basal factors
with TATA-binding protein, TATA-binding protein-associated factors, and
RNA polymerase II at the initiation site of the promoter region (2).
Promoter and enhancer regions are also composed of multiple DNA sites
that interact with sequence-specific transcription factors, which are
believed to enhance the recruitment of basal factors to the initiation
complex. Cell-restricted gene expression thus relies upon the
combinatorial recognition of multiple cis-acting DNA sequences bound by
families of cell-specific nuclear factors, which potentiate or repress
transcriptional initiation (3). Because transcription factors play a
central role in regulating cellular differentiation, the analysis of
their molecular structure and expression patterns has facilitated
elucidation of regulatory pathways involved in establishing
tissue-specific gene transcription. In combination with other
cell-specific transcription factors, the hepatocyte nuclear factor-3
(HNF-3
)1 and -3
proteins regulate
cell-specific transcription in hepatocytes (4) and in respiratory
(5-8) and intestinal epithelium (9). The HNF-3/fork head
homolog (HFH) proteins are an extensive family of transcription factors
that share homology in the winged helix DNA binding domain (10).
Members of the HFH/winged helix family have been implicated in cell
fate determination during embryonic pattern formation, in
organogenesis, and in cell-type-specific gene expression. Although the
HNF-3 and HNF-3
genes are important for cell-type specific gene
regulation, their expression initiates during the primitive streak
stage of embryogenesis (11-13). Disruption of the HNF-3
gene in
homozygous knock-out mice results in an embryonic lethal phenotype,
which exhibits defects in the formation of notochord, neurotube,
somites, and gut endoderm (14, 15). Furthermore, targeted disruption of
the winged helix of nude mouse (whn) gene results in the
phenotype of the nude mouse mutation (16). Aberrant expression of
altered winged helix proteins has also been associated with neoplastic
transformations (17-19). Taken together, these studies indicate that
the winged helix protein family plays critical roles in cellular
differentiation during embryonic development.
The HFH-3 winged helix DNA binding domain was previously isolated from rat kidney cDNA using a PCR protocol with degenerate primers synthesized to conserved sequences within this DNA binding domain (20). Northern blot analysis demonstrates that HFH-3 expression is restricted to the kidney. Subsequent to these studies, the winged helix domain of the human kidney-specific HFH-3 homolog, fork head-related activator-6 (Freac-6), was isolated from a human genomic library (21). Here, we report on the complete human HFH-3 cDNA sequence and its deduced amino acid sequence. We show that HFH-3 is a potent transcriptional activator and that expression is restricted to the epithelium of the renal distal tubules. We determined the HFH-3 DNA binding consensus sequence and used this consensus to identify putative target genes expressed there.
In situ hybridization of paraffin embedded mouse embryos or adult kidney was performed with 33P-labeled antisense RNA probe generated from an EcoRI-linearized rat HFH-3 cDNA (nucleotides 208-517) pGEM-1 template using SP6 RNA polymerase and [33P]UTP (Amersham) as described (22). Antisense 33P-labeled HFH-3 RNA probes were hybridized to sectioned dewaxed mouse embryos or adult rat kidneys and rinsed at high stringency followed by autoradiography as described (22). A dark field condenser was used to enhance the visualization of the silver grains corresponding to specific HFH-3 hybridization.
In Vitro DNA Binding Site Selection and Electrophoretic Mobility Shift AssaysHFH-3 winged helix DNA binding domain (amino acids
87-208) was fused to the GST protein, and GST-HFH-3 fusion protein was isolated from bacterial cultures and purified to homogeneity via glutathione affinity chromatography (23). The affinity-purified GST-HFH-3 fusion protein was used to isolate high affinity HFH-3 binding sites from a pool of partially degenerate oligonucleotides containing 14 degenerate positions by six cycles of repetitive protein
selection and PCR amplification as described by Overdier et
al. (23). The HFH-3 protein-selected sites were cloned in pGEM1,
and the DNA insert was labeled during PCR amplification using
5-labeled T7 and SP6 primers and tested for HFH-3 protein complex
formation by electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSA) with 60 ng of
affinity-purified recombinant GST-HFH-3 protein using methods described
previously (23). We chose 31 high affinity HFH-3 binding sites from a
total of 55 selected DNA sites to determine the HFH-3 consensus
sequence. The frequency of occurrence for each nucleotide was used to
compile a 13-nucleotide HFH-3 binding consensus sequence (Table I; the
14th nucleotide position was degenerate). Double-stranded
oligonucleotides were made to previously described winged helix DNA
binding sites (23), which conformed to the HFH-3 consensus sequence
(e.g. HFH-1 site 25). Radioactively labeled oligonucleotides
containing HFH-3 binding sites were used for EMSA with 60 ng of
affinity-purified GST-HFH-3 fusion protein and 4 µg of
poly(dI·dC-dI·dC) in a 20-µl binding reaction as described previously (23). We used the HFH-3 DNA binding consensus sequence to
search 12 putative regulatory regions of genes expressed in distal
convoluted tubules of the kidney (extracted from GenBankTM). Eight of
these promoters contained putative HFH-3 binding sites.
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To determine the HFH-3 transcriptional activity,
cotransfection assays were performed in human hepatoma HepG2 cells, a
cell line that does not express endogenous HFH-3 protein. This
cotransfection assay consisted of a reporter plasmid containing four
copies of the high affinity HFH-3 binding site (HFH-1 site 25) cloned
upstream of a TATA box-driven chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT)
gene, an expression vector that used the CMV promoter to express the HFH-3 cDNA sequences and a CMV promoter-driven -galactosidase control plasmid to normalize for differences in transfection efficiency (24). The full-length HFH-3 cDNA was cloned as an EcoRI
in the CMV expression vector (24). HFH-3 cDNA deletions were
created by a PCR-mediated strategy using Vent DNA polymerase (New
England Biolabs) and primers containing XbaI (3
) or
BamHI (5
) restriction sites as described previously (24).
PCR-generated C-terminal or 3
HFH-3 cDNA deletions terminated with
an XbaI site, and the resulting
EcoRI-XbaI fragment (5
to 3
) was cloned into
the CMV expression vector. PCR-generated N-terminal or 5
HFH-3
cDNA deletions terminated with a BamHI site, and the
resulting BamHI-XbaI fragment (5
to 3
) was
cloned in frame with a translational initiation sequence into the CMV
expression vector. Internal deletions were made by cloning
PCR-generated C-terminal HFH-3 XbaI fragments (247-351,
213-351) in frame with HFH-3 C-terminal deletion sequences (1-208,
1-246). The boundaries of the HFH-3 deletion constructs were confirmed
by DNA sequencing.
Human hepatoma HepG2 cells were maintained in monolayer cultures and
transfected (25) using Lipofectin reagent (Life Technologies, Inc.)
according to manufacturer's protocol (35 mm plates, 400 ng of
CMV-HFH-3 expression vector, 1600 ng of 4 × HFH-1 site 25 CAT
reporter, 100 ng of CMV--galactosidase construct, and 10 µl of
Lipofectin). Cellular protein extracts were prepared from transfected
cells 48 h after transfection and analyzed for CAT, and
-galactosidase enzyme activity was determined as described previously (25). To determine the expression of HFH-3 deletion mutants
during cotransfection experiments, nuclear extracts were prepared from
HepG2 cells transfected with the HFH-3 cDNA constructs and analyzed
by EMSA as described previously (24).
The rat HFH-3 winged helix DNA binding domain was used as
a probe to screen a human cDNA library propagated in gt11 phage. The HFH-3 cDNA clone consists of 2089 nucleotides and contains an
open reading frame between nucleotides 79 and 1131 encoding a 351-amino
acid polypeptide (the complete HFH-3 cDNA sequence has been
appended to GenBank accession number L13203[GenBank]; Fig.
1a). Allowing for a 200-nucleotide poly(A)
tail, the HFH-3 cDNA sequence represents a full-length cDNA
clone because the human HFH-3/Freac-6 mRNA size is 2.3 kilobase
pairs as evidenced by Northern blot analysis (21). The HFH-3 winged
helix DNA binding domain exhibits 56% amino acid identity compared
with the first identified winged helix family member HNF-3
(26, 27).
Included in the amino acid alignment figure are other winged helix
proteins, which are expressed in the developing and/or adult kidney.
However, the HFH-3 protein does not exhibit sequence similarity outside of the winged helix DNA binding motif with other transcriptional activation domains shared with members of the winged helix family (5,
24, 27, 28).
HFH-3 Is Expressed in the Distal Tubule Epithelium of the Adult Kidney
To determine the HFH-3 cellular expression patterns, we
performed in situ hybridization of paraffin embedded
sections of a 16-day post coitum mouse embryos or adult kidney with a
33P-labeled antisense HFH-3 RNA probe (Fig.
2). After hybridization, stringent washes, and
autoradiography, dark field microscopy was used to visualize
HFH-3-expressing cells in the tissues. Shown is a paraffin section of
the 16-day post coitum embryonic kidney, demonstrating that the HFH-3
gene was expressed in the epithelium of the convoluted tubules (Fig.
2a). HFH-3 expression continued in the tubule epithelium
located in both cortex and medulla of the adult kidney (Fig.
2b). Magnification of the renal cortex demonstrates that
HFH-3 was expressed in the distal convoluted tubules but not in the
proximal convoluted tubules or in the glomeruli within the renal
corpuscles (Fig. 2, c and d). Because the
morphology of the distal straight and convoluted tubules is
indistinguishable, we are not able to rule out the possibility that
HFH-3 is expressed in the distal ascending straight tubules. HFH-3
expression was not detected in the medullary ray, which is devoid of
glomeruli and contains the collecting ducts (Fig. 2b). HFH-3
hybridization signals were not detected in the descending straight
tubules, which are the continuation of the proximal convoluted tubules or in the loops of Henle (data not shown).
Determination of HFH-3 DNA Binding Consensus Sequence
To
identify putative target genes expressed in distal tubule epithelium of
the kidney, we determined the HFH-3 DNA binding consensus sequence
using repetitive protein selection and PCR amplification as described
(23). The HFH-3 protein-selected sites were cloned, radioactively
labeled, and tested for HFH-3 protein-DNA complex formation by EMSA.
Those sites that exhibited high binding affinity for the HFH-3 protein
were chosen for DNA sequence determination and were compared with
determine the percent occurrence for each nucleotide position (Table
I). This comparison allowed us to compile the HFH-3
binding consensus sequence (Table I). The HFH-3 consensus binding
sequence is DBDTRTTTAYDTR (where D is not C, B is not A, R is A or G,
and Y is C or T). DNA binding assays with sites containing either
TTRTTTRT (HFH-1 site 25) or the TTGTTGTT (HFH-2 site 7) core sequences
that adhered to the HFH-3 consensus formed complexes with recombinant
HFH-3 protein in EMSA (Fig. 3, sites 1 and
2; data not shown). By contrast, weak or no HFH-3 binding
activity was exhibited by DNA sites that deviated from the HFH-3
consensus (Fig. 4, sequences 3-5).
The HFH-3 Transcriptional Activation Domain Resides in the C-terminal Sequences
To determine the HFH-3 transcriptional activation domain(s), we used cotransfection assays (24, 29) to compare the activation levels between wild-type and truncated HFH-3 proteins (see "Experimental Procedures"). To avoid complications with endogenous HFH-3 protein, we chose the human hepatoma HepG2 cell line that does not express HFH-3 to perform the cotransfection assays and monitored HFH-3 protein expression via EMSA with nuclear extracts (data not shown). None of the deletion constructs disrupted the winged helix DNA binding domain, which is sufficient to direct nuclear localization (29).
Cotransfection assays with the full-length HFH-3 cDNA expression plasmid provided an approximately 40-60-fold increase in reporter gene transcription compared with the CMV control plasmid (Fig. 4, constructs 1 and 2). This activation was dependent on retention of the HFH-3 recognition sequence in the reporter construct (data not shown). Removal of the first 86 N-terminal residues from the HFH-3 protein did not reduce transcriptional activity (Fig. 4, construct 3), but deletion of only 38 C-terminal residues resulted in a 50% decrease in HFH-3 transcriptional activity (Fig. 4, construct 4). Further C-terminal deletions eliminated detectable HFH-3 transcriptional activation (Fig. 4, constructs 5 and 6). Internal deletions were created using an XbaI site at the ends of the C-terminal deletions. A 50% reduction in transcriptional activity was observed when an XbaI linker was inserted between amino acid residues 246 and 247 of the HFH-3 protein (Fig. 4, construct 7). An internal deletion that removed amino acid residues 209-246 of the HFH-3 protein eliminated transcriptional activation in cotransfection assays and exhibited activity identical to the 1-208 C-terminal HFH-3 deletion construct (Fig. 4, compare constructs 8 and 9). However, a smaller internal deletion that removed amino acid residues between 209 and 212 was almost as active as the wild-type protein. These functional studies suggest that the minimal HFH-3 transcriptional activation domain resides in the amino acid 213-351 C-terminal sequences, which do not resemble those of other winged helix transcription factors.
The winged helix/HFH proteins are a large family of transcription factors that share homology in the winged helix DNA binding domain and are involved in the differentiation of diverse cellular lineages (for review, see Refs. 4 and 30). In this study we report on the isolation of the kidney-specific HFH-3 cDNA clone and show that it is a potent transcriptional activator with activity residing in the C-terminal 138 amino acids. This region does not share sequence similarity with transcriptional activation motifs previously identified for related winged helix family members (5, 24, 27, 28). The HFH-3 activation domain possesses features found in other transcriptional activation motifs and includes an acidic amino acid composition that exhibits an estimated pI of 4.65 as well as significant numbers of proline, serine, and threonine amino acid residues (31, 32). The HFH-3 activation domain also exhibits sequence similarity in three amino acid regions (246-257, 415-432, and 513-528) with the transcriptional factors Oct-1 (GenBank accession number X70324[GenBank]) and of the herpesvirus 3 ICP4 (GenBank accession number X02132[GenBank]). These sequence comparisons suggest that the HFH-3 protein utilizes activation motifs in common with other eukaryotic transcription factors but not with the winged helix family.
We used in situ hybridization to demonstrate that HFH-3 is restricted to the distal tubule epithelium of embryonic and adult kidney. The distal tubules possess regulated ion channels, which are involved in the reabsorption of sodium and bicarbonate ions from the urine in exchange for the excretion of potassium and hydrogen ions, thus rendering the urine acidic (33, 34). This readsorption process is regulated by the hormone aldosterone, a ligand for the mineralocorticoid receptor involved in activation of genes involved in Na/H exchange (35, 36). In support of the important role of HFH-3 in regulating genes involved in the function of the distal tubules, we used the HFH-3 DNA binding consensus sequence to identify several potential target genes involved in the function of the renal distal tubules (Table II). Potential HFH-3 binding sites were found in the genes encoding Na/H exchanger, anion exchanger, and two subunits of the Na/K-ATPase proteins (Table II). Furthermore, we found potential HFH-3 binding sites in the mineralocorticoid receptor gene, which encodes an aldosterone-dependent transcription factor that activates the expression of genes involved in renal distal tubule function. In the adult kidney, LFB1/HNF-1 expression is restricted to the proximal and distal tubules, whereas LFB3/vHNF-1 expression is also detected in the collecting ducts (37) and HNF-4 expression is detected throughout the nephrons (22). We also found potential HFH-3 binding sites in the genes for tissue-specific transcription factors HNF-1, vHNF-1, and HNF-4 (Table II). Consistent with this prediction, one of the potential HFH-3 binding sites in the vHNF-1 promoter is DNase I-footprinted with kidney nuclear extracts (38). Although these transcription factors are expressed more broadly than the HFH-3 gene, HFH-3 may participate in regulating their expression in the distal tubule epithelium of the kidney.
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In addition to the HFH-3 gene, other members of the winged helix
transcription factors exhibit restricted cellular expression patterns
in the kidney (Fig. 1b). The HNF-3 gene is expressed in
the urothelium of the embryonic and adult renal pelvis and may regulate
genes involved in readsorption of water from urine (9). Epithelial
expression of HFH-3 and HNF-3 in the kidney thus forms a continuum from
the distal convoluted tubules to the collecting ducts. Another winged
helix transcription factor, BF-2, is expressed in the metanephric
mesenchyme, which gives rise to both the nephron epithelium and stromal
cells of the mature kidney (39). Targeted disruption of the BF-2 gene
in mice has inhibited the induction of renal mesenchyme into tubular
epithelium and branching of the ureter and renal collecting system
(39). Two other winged helix transcription factors are also expressed
in the mesenchyme of the developing embryonic kidney, including the mesenchyme fork head 1 (MFH-1) (40) and fkh-6
gene (41). Furthermore, a new member of the winged helix family,
HFH-11, is transiently expressed in the cortical epithelium and
mesenchyme of the embryonic mouse kidney but its expression is
extinguished in the adult kidney (42). Like the kidney, HFH-11 is also
expressed in the proliferating cells of the embryonic intestine, lung,
and liver but its expression is extinguished in non-replicating cells
of these organs in the adult. We have shown that HFH-11 expression is
reactivated in response to proliferative signals induced following
organ injury. It is therefore likely that the winged helix HFH-11 gene
is reactivated in the renal cortex in response to cellular injury. The
winged helix family of transcription factors thus appears to play an important role in kidney morphogenesis and terminal differentiation of
various cell types in the adult kidney.
In summary, we demonstrated that HFH-3 expression is restricted to the epithelium of the distal convoluted tubules in the developing and adult kidney. We determined an HFH-3 DNA binding consensus sequence and identified potential target genes in cells co-expressing HFH-3. Transfection studies demonstrate that HFH-3 is a potent transcriptional activator whose activation domain resides in sequences located at the C terminus and that these sequences possess features in common with other transcriptional activation domains, but not with other HFH family members.
The nucleotide sequence(s) reported in this paper has been submitted to the GenBankTM/EMBL Data Bank with accession number(s) L13203[GenBank].
We thank P. Raychaudhuri for critically reading the manuscript. The DNA sequence for the human HFH-3 cDNA was determined by the DNA Sequencing and Synthesis Facility at Iowa State University of Science and Technology.