From the Unité de Diabétologie Clinique, Centre Médical Universitaire, CH-1211 Genève 4, Switzerland
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ABSTRACT |
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The insulin and glucagon genes are expressed in the beta and alpha cells of the islets of Langerhans, respectively. The factors controlling their cell- and islet-specific expression are poorly known. Insulin-enhancer factor-1 (IEF1) has previously been shown to interact with the E boxes of the rat insulin I and II genes and was proposed to play a critical role in beta cell-specific expression. BETA2, a recently identified basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) protein, binds with high affinity and transactivates the rat insulin II gene upon dimerization with the ubiquitous bHLH protein E47. We show here that the heterodimer E47/BETA2 also binds and transactivates the rat insulin I and glucagon genes and exhibits the same characteristics as IEF1. In transfection experiments, the E boxes of the insulin I and glucagon genes confer transcriptional activity in both insulin- and glucagon-producing cells, which is increased by overexpression of E47 and BETA2. However, overexpression of E47 inhibits only E box-mediated glucagon gene expression, whereas it activates insulin gene transcription, indicating that the E boxes of the insulin and glucagon genes display gene-specific characteristics. We conclude that the heterodimer E47/BETA2 represents an islet-specific factor that controls both insulin and glucagon gene transcription and that the E47/BETA2 ratio may be important for regulated gene expression.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Glucagon and insulin are two major antagonist hormones secreted by the endocrine pancreas which control glucose homeostasis. Glucagon gene expression in the adult is restricted to the alpha cells of the pancreas, the L-cells of the intestine, and some specific cell types in the central nervous system, whereas insulin gene expression is limited to pancreatic beta cells. The regulation as well as the cell-specific expression of both genes rely on specific interactions between cis-acting DNA sequences of their promoters and trans-acting factors (1, 2).
Four DNA control elements have been defined within the first 300 bp1 of the rat glucagon gene promoter which function as islet- or cell-specific cis-acting elements (3, 4). G1 is a proximal promoter element located upstream of the TATA box and involved in cell-specific expression (5). G2 and G3 are distal enhancers, whereas G4 is located in the proximal promoter just upstream of G1 (4, 6). The G4 element contains two palindromic consensus sequence CANNTG motifs, one of which (E3) functions as an E box, separated by an intervening sequence. The complete element acts as a mini-enhancer in glucagon-producing cells (6).
E box motifs bind factors which belong to the basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) family of transcription factors. These factors have been shown to participate in the regulation of several cell- and tissue-specific genes (7-11). The bHLH transcription factor family is divided into three groups according to their structure, DNA-binding ability, and cell distribution. Class A factors, such as USF or E47, are ubiquitous and bind DNA as homo- or heterodimers, whereas class B factors are tissue-specific and preferentially bind as heterodimers with class A factors. Class C factors contain a leucine zipper motif at the carboxyl-terminal end of the bHLH domain and are further divided into ubiquitous and tissue-specific subgroups.
Functional studies on rat insulin I and II gene expression have identified several binding sites for trans-acting factors within the first 400 bp of the 5'-flanking sequence which confer beta cell-specific expression including two distinct types of DNA motifs, A boxes, which correspond to the minimal sequence TAAT, and E boxes, corresponding to the consensus CANNTG (12, 13).
The two E boxes E1 and E2 of the rat insulin I gene have been reported to play a major role in beta cell-specific expression and regulation by glucose; they interact with insulin enhancer factor 1 (IEF1), a protein complex composed of the ubiquitous bHLH protein E12/E47 and an islet cell-specific factor (14-16). IEF1 is also present in glucagon-producing cells, and previous results from our group suggested that IEF1 may also interact with the E3 element of the glucagon gene and thus play a role not only in insulin gene expression but rather in islet hormone gene expression (6). Recent work on the E1 box of the insulin II gene (previously called RIPE3a), which is also critical for beta cell-specific expression, has led to the characterization of BETA2, a class B bHLH transcription factor which is capable of binding with high affinity as a heterodimer to E1 and activating insulin gene transcription (17). Since E boxes with the same core motif are also found in the rat insulin I and glucagon genes, we hypothesized that the E47/BETA2 heterodimer may affect their expression also and thus function as an activator of islet hormone gene expression. We tested this hypothesis by investigating the interactions of E47 and BETA2 with E3 and E1 of the glucagon and insulin I genes, respectively. Our data indicate that the heterodimer E47/BETA2 binds to and transactivates the E boxes of the glucagon and insulin I genes and represents IEF1. The E boxes of both genes function in both glucagon- and insulin-producing cells, but not in BHK-21 cells, indicating that IEF1 is necessary but not sufficient for the E box-mediated transcriptional activity. However, the E boxes of the insulin and glucagon genes are not interchangeable and display clear specificity. Indeed, E47 overexpression inhibits glucagon gene transcription through specific interactions with E3, whereas insulin gene transcription is activated, suggesting that the E47/BETA2 ratio might be critical for the regulation of these genes.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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Oligonucleotides and Plasmids--
The oligonucleotides
IEB1 (gatccGCCATCTGCCA, where lowercase letters are attached ends and
uppercase letters reflect the DNA sequence of the gene promoter
fragment) and E130 (gatccTGAGGAGCAGATGAGCAGAGAGTa) containing the E1
box of the rat insulin I gene and the E3 box of the rat glucagon gene,
respectively (see Fig. 1) (6), were synthesized on a gene assembler
(Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). Reporter plasmids containing glucagon
promoter sequences were constructed by placing
BamHI-compatible ends on two oligonucleotide copies of the
wild type (G4-CAT) or mutated (G4-108N-CAT, and G4-130N-CAT) G4
sequences (corresponding to 100/
140 bp of the glucagon promoter)
and inserting them into a BamHI site upstream of the
glucagon minimal promoter (
31 to +58 bp) linked to the CAT reporter
gene (6). The same strategy was used to insert two copies of the E130
oligonucleotide containing the functional E3 box (found within G4).
Reporter plasmids containing insulin I gene promoter sequences were
prepared by linking two copies of the E1 (gatcCGCCATCTGCCA) or E2
(gatccGCCATCTGGCa) boxes (formerly IEB1 and IEB2, respectively)
to the CAT reporter gene (18), and were generously provided by Dr. M. Walker (Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel).
Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assays (EMSAs)-- Double-stranded oligonucleotide probes corresponding to the glucagon E3 (E130) and insulin E1 (IEB1) boxes (6) were labeled to a specific activity of ~108 cpm/µg in the presence of [32P]dCTP with the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I. Binding reactions were performed in 25 mM Hepes, pH 7.9, 150 mM KCl, 10% glycerol, 5 mM dithiothreitol, 300 ng of poly(dI·dC), 300 ng of poly(dA·dT), and 20,000-40,000 cpm of oligonucleotide probe on ice for 20 min before loading onto a 5% nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel (acrylamide/bisacrylamide 40:0.8) containing 40 mM Tris-glycine (see Figs. 2A-C, 3, and 7). Reactions were also performed at room temperature in 12 mM Hepes, pH 7.9, 12% glycerol, 60 mM KCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 0.12 mM EDTA, 0.3 mM dithiothreitol, 20,000-40,000 cpm of oligonucleotide probe, 200 ng of single-stranded DNA, and 1 µg of poly(dI·dC) and then applied to 5% polyacrylamide gels containing 0.25× TBE (see Figs. 1 and 2, D and E). Antibodies against BETA2 were kindly provided by M. J. Tsai (Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX) and antibodies against E47 by M. Walker (Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel) and C. Murre (University of California, San Diego, CA). The USF antibody was from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc. (Santa Cruz, CA).
Nuclear Extracts-- Nuclear extracts from BHK-21 and InR1G9 cells were prepared according to Schreiber et al. (20).
In Vitro Transcription/Translations-- BETA2 and E47 proteins were synthesized in vitro with a coupled transcription/translation kit (Promega) according to the manufacturer's instructions, using T7 polymerase and linearized pCi-Neo-BETA2 and pCi-Neo-E47 DNA templates. Simultaneous reactions were carried out in the presence of unlabeled or [35S]methionine. Synthesis and translation efficiency were assessed by analysis of labeled samples on a 12% SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
Cell Cultures and Transient Transfections-- Glucagon-producing InR1G9 (21), insulin-producing HIT-T15 (22), and Syrian baby hamster kidney BHK-21 cells were cultured in RPMI 1640 medium containing 5% fetal calf serum and 5% newborn calf serum. InR1G9 cells were transfected by the DEAE-dextran method (23), HIT-T15 cells with Transfectam (Promega) according to the instructions of the manufacturer, and BHK-21 cells by the calcium phosphate method. pRSVCAT and poCAT (24) were used as positive and negative controls, respectively. Cotransfection experiments were performed with reporter plasmids (different sequences of the glucagon or insulin gene promoters linked to the reporter gene CAT) and expression plasmids (pCi-Neo, pCi-Neo-BETA2, and/or pCi-Neo-E47) in a 10/1 ratio for Figs. 5, 6A, and 7, C and D and in the ratios indicated in the legends for Fig. 6, B-D.
Chloramphenicol Acetyltransferase Assay-- Cell extract were prepared 48 h after transfection and assayed in duplicate for CAT activity as described previously (4). Each transfection was repeated at least six times. Acetylated and nonacetylated forms were quantified using a PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics) after separation by thin layer chromatography. Protein concentrations were measured by a Bio-Rad assay kit.
Data Analysis-- Data are presented as mean ± S.E. and analyzed by analysis of variance and Student's t test when applicable. The threshold for statistical significance was p < 0.05.
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RESULTS |
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IEF1 Is a Heterodimer of E47 and BETA2 and Binds to the E Boxes of the Insulin and Glucagon Gene Promoters-- We (6) recently characterized a composite element of the glucagon gene promoter, G4, which contains at least three binding sites, the most distal one (E3) acting as a functional E box (Fig. 1). We suggested that the IEF1 complex, previously shown to represent a critical determinant of the beta cell-specific expression of the insulin gene, could interact with E3 of the glucagon gene and thus be involved in the islet-specific expression of the glucagon gene. It has recently been proposed (17) that the likely equivalent of IEF1 which interacts with E1 (RIPE3a) of the rat insulin II gene is a heterodimer composed of E47, an ubiquitous bHLH protein, and BETA2, a class B bHLH protein present in the islets of Langerhans, the intestine, and the brain. We thus investigated whether these two proteins were indeed capable of binding to E3 of the rat glucagon gene and to E1 of the rat insulin I gene. Nuclear extracts prepared from the glucagon-producing cell line InR1G9 were incubated with oligonucleotides containing either E1 (IEB1) (Fig. 2A) of the rat insulin I gene or E3 (E130) (Fig. 2B) of the rat glucagon gene and analyzed by EMSAs. As reported previously (6) and shown in Fig. 2, the islet-specific IEF1 complex and several nonspecific complexes are observed with both oligonucleotides. The addition of either anti-E47 or anti-BETA2 antibodies supershifted or disrupted the IEF1 complex, whereas anti-USF antibodies had no effect (data not shown). Of note, migration of IEF1 with IEB1 was identical to that observed with E130; its intensity with E130, however, was only 1/10th of that seen with IEB1, illustrating the lower affinity of IEF1 for E3 compared with E1 (Fig. 2A).
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E47 Represses whereas E47/BETA2 Activates Glucagon Gene Transcription-- To investigate the functional roles of BETA2 and E47 on glucagon gene expression, we first performed cotransfection experiments in BHK-21 cells using the glucagon G4 element (see sequence of Fig. 5) linked to the first 31 bp of the glucagon gene promoter and 58 bp of the first exon as well as to the CAT reporter gene (G4-CAT) and expression vectors containing either the E47, BETA2, or both cDNAs. The G4 element was unable to direct significant expression of the CAT reporter gene in these non-islet cells, and CAT activity was not affected by cotransfection of any of the cDNAs (data not shown). Similar results were reported using the E1 (RIPE3a) element of the insulin II gene (17). Taken together with the fact that nuclear extracts from BHK-21 cells transfected with either the E47 or/and BETA2 cDNAs can form specific complexes with both E1 and E3 boxes, these results indicate that IEF1 by itself is not sufficient for transactivating the insulin and glucagon gene promoter in heterologous cells and that it likely requires additional cell-specific factors such as PDX1 (formally Idx1/IPF1/STF1) or RIPE3b to be functional (17, 18).
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Differential Regulatory Effects of E47 and BETA2 on the E Boxes of the Rat Insulin I and Glucagon Genes-- The inhibitory effects of E47 on glucagon gene transcription are opposite to what has been previously reported for the rat insulin I and II genes. Overexpression of E47 in insulin-producing cell lines results in an activation of reporter genes driven by the E1 box of the rat insulin II gene (17). In addition, transfection of antisense oligonucleotides to the E47 mRNA in HIT cells leads to a decrease of insulin mRNA levels (25). To further investigate the different regulatory effects of E47 and BETA2 on glucagon and insulin gene expression, we cotransfected reporter gene constructs driven by the different E boxes of the rat insulin I and glucagon genes along with expression plasmids coding for E47 or BETA2 into glucagon-producing InR1G9 cells and the insulin-producing cell line HIT-T15. The transfected reporter genes were driven by either two copies of G4 (G4-CAT) or E3 (E130-CAT) of the glucagon gene or by two copies of either E1 (IEB1-CAT) or E2 (IEB2-CAT) of the rat insulin I gene. All of these constructs resulted in a significant basal activity in both InR1G9 and HIT-T15 cells (Fig. 7, A and B), indicating that the E boxes of the insulin and glucagon gene promoter function in both cell lines, a finding in agreement with the presence of IEF1 in these cells. Of note, IEB1-CAT displayed the greatest basal activities in both InR1G9 and HIT-T15 cells compared with G4-CAT or E130-CAT; our transcriptional data thus correspond qualitatively to the degree of IEF1 binding affinity to IEB1 relative to E130 (Fig. 2A).
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DISCUSSION |
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Our results indicate that the heterodimer E47/BETA2 is able to bind and transactivate the E boxes of the rat glucagon and insulin I genes. Taken together with similar results from Naya et al. (17) on the E1 box of the insulin II gene, E47/BETA2 can be considered to represent IEF1. Originally thought to be critical for beta cell-specific expression of the insulin gene (14, 26, 27), IEF1 was later shown to be present not only in beta cells but also in alpha cells of the islets of Langerhans (6, 28). Furthermore, BETA2 is detected in the mouse intestinal enteroendocrine S-cell line (STC-1) which is expressed in the glucagon gene, the hamster intestine, the mouse corticotroph pituitary cell line (AtT20), and the brain (17). IEF1 may thus have a much wider role than previously proposed for the cell-specific expression of the insulin gene. In fact, our data suggest that IEF1 may exert a critical role in the control of glucagon gene expression. IEF1 binds to E3 of the composite G4 element and transactivates the glucagon gene promoter only in the presence of an intact E3 box. In addition, basal transcriptional activity of the glucagon gene is decreased by 75% when the E3 motif is disrupted (6) (Fig. 4). Finally, we have found BETA2 transcripts by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analysis in rat primary islet non- beta cells (essentially alpha and delta cells) in roughly the same abundance as in primary beta cells, suggesting that BETA2 may also be operative in normal alpha cells (data not shown). The fact that BETA2 is present in the STC-1 cell line, the intestine, and the brain, which all express the glucagon gene, further suggests a role for IEF1 in glucagon gene expression. IEF1 may thus represent an important factor in the control of islet hormone gene expression, at least for the insulin and glucagon genes.
The bHLH family of transcription factors not only regulates the activity of many genes but is also critical in specifying cell fate as reported for muscle differentiation (8, 29, 30), neurogenesis (31), hematopoesis (9, 32), and sex determination (33). Although the presence of BETA2 in tissues of different embryological origins does not facilitate the attribution of an obvious role in cell-type determination, BETA2 may still have different functions in the ontogenesis of distinct tissues. Its presence in the intestine and the islets of Langerhans opens the possibility that it may be involved in the differentiation of endoderm-derived tissues.
The combinatorial character of bHLH factors is certainly of major importance for their regulatory capacity. Increased synthesis of one member of the family relative to the others may shift the homodimer/heterodimer equilibrium and result in changes in gene transcription. In this regard, overexpression of E47 or BETA2 in islet cell lines has revealed an interesting modulating potential on E box-mediated transcription by such changes in bHLH equilibrium. E47 inhibits E3-mediated transcriptional activity in InR1G9 cells while it stimulates E1 and E2-dependent transcription in both InR1G9 and HIT-T15 cells. The opposite transcriptional effects of E47 on the glucagon E3 and the insulin E1 and E2 boxes may either be explained by the cell environment, by E box sequence specificity, or by both. Since E47 can exert both negative and positive transcriptional effects in InR1G9 cells, it is likely that E box sequence specificity plays a major role. Sequence comparison between the glucagon gene E3 element and the E1 and E2 box of the insulin I and II genes, respectively, reveals that their core motif is identical. However, the E3 box is inverted 3' to 5' compared with the insulin gene E1 and E2 boxes and surrounding nucleotides, which have been shown to be critical for both binding specificity and affinity are different. Of major relevance, E3 has one flanking T residue which may decrease binding of bHLH proteins such as E47 (34, 35). A comparable role of flanking nucleotides was also observed in the transcriptional modulation of tissue-specific genes by MyoD (30). These characteristics may well explain the difference in the IEF1 complex observed with nuclear extracts from InR1G9 cells or from cells transfected with the E47 cDNA on E130 compared with IEB1, as well as the opposite effects of E47 on E3 versus E1- and E2-mediated transcription.
Although E47/BETA2 heterodimers have a higher affinity compared with E47 homodimers for the E boxes of the glucagon and insulin genes and thus must be functionally favored in native cells, major changes in the abundance of one or more bHLH proteins may result in the selection of E47 homodimers to act on E boxes. Due to the combinatorial characteristics of HLH proteins, the changes may not be specific for E47 or BETA2 since formation and binding of E47 homodimers to E boxes may be secondary to heterodimerization with bHLH or HLH proteins such as Id or to indirect effects due to shifting equilibria within the extended bHLH/HLH pool. In this direction, we have detected similar levels of E47 mRNA in InR1G9 and HIT-T15 cells but an 8-10-fold higher abundance of Id-1 mRNA levels in InR1G9 compared with HIT-T15 cells.2 The higher levels of Id proteins in InR1G9 cells may indirectly result, depending on their relative affinity for E47 and BETA2, in the preferential formation of either E47 homodimers or E47/BETA2 heterodimers by capturing selectively one of the partners.
Posttranscriptional modifications of E47, such as the degree of phosphorylation, may also affect the ratio of E47 homo- to heterodimers (36). The opposite effects of E47 on glucagon and insulin gene transcription may have relevance for gene regulation by physiological stimuli. Indeed, insulin and glucagon secretion are often inversely related and it may be hypothesized that factors involved in the control of glucagon and insulin secretion may also play a role in gene expression and potentially mediate their effects through the E box motif. In that regard, it is of interest to note that E2 of the rat insulin I gene has been suggested to mediate, at least in part, the glucose effects on insulin gene expression. These studies indicate that IEF1 increases in intensity with increasing glucose concentrations, and that overexpression of E47 can ablate the transcriptional response to glucose (37).
The transactivating potential of E47/BETA2 in our transfection
experiments was found to be variable, from zero in BHK-21 cells to
7-fold for IEB2-CAT in InR1G9 cells. The absence of effects of E47
homodimers or E47/BETA2 heterodimers on E box-mediated transcription in
non-islet cells has been noted previously (17) and may result from the
fact that these complexes require additional DNA binding proteins to
develop their full potential and exert synergistic effects on
transcription. Such functional interactions have been suggested between
E47/BETA2 and the 3b-binding complex on RIPE3 of the rat insulin II
gene and between E47 and PDX-1 (formally STF-1/IDX-1/IPF-1) on the
minienhancer of the rat insulin I gene (17, 38). The characteristics of
the cell lines used are likely to be of major importance in the
resultant levels of basal and stimulated transcriptional activity of
specific plasmids. For instance, IEB1-CAT and IEB2-CAT transfections
into two different insulin-producing cell lines, RIN2A and HIT-T15
cells, resulted in 25 and 49% (IEB1-CAT) and 37 and 87% (IEB2-CAT),
respectively, of the activity generated by a plasmid containing the
enhancer (346 to
103 bp) of the rat insulin I gene (39). These
differences observed in cell lines exhibiting the same phenotype alert
us to interpret with caution the variations found in the E box-mediated transcription in InR1G9 cells compared with HIT-T15 cells. Indeed, even
though our results show major differences in basal transcriptional activity of IEB1-CAT and IEB2-CAT and in E47 and E47/BETA2-mediated regulation of transcription between InR1G9 cells and HIT-T15 cell lines, some of these differences may not be attributed to cell phenotypes per se but to random cell characteristics. In
conclusion, our findings indicate that E47 and BETA2 may play a major
role in islet cell-specific glucagon and insulin gene expression and that their respective levels may affect regulated expression.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT |
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We thank Dr. R. Jaffe for critical review of the manuscript.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation, the Helmut Horten Foundation, the Institute for Human Genetics and Biochemistry, the Wolfermann-Nägeli Foundation, and the Elsie and Carlos de Reuter Foundation.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Unité de
Diabétologie Clinique, Centre Médical Universitaire, 1, rue
Michel Servet, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland. Tel.: 41 22 372 93 02; Fax. 41 22 372 93 26; E-mail: Philippe{at}cmu.unige.ch.
The abbreviations used are: bp, base pair(s); bHLH, basic helix-loop-helix; IEF, insulin enhancer factor; CAT, chloramphenicol acetyltransferase; CMV, cytomegalovirus; EMSA, electrophoretic mobility shift assay.
2 E. Dumonteil, B. Laser, I. Constant, and J. Philippe, unpublished data.
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REFERENCES |
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