A Regulatory Element in the Human Interleukin 2 Gene Promoter Is a Binding Site for the Zinc Finger Proteins Sp1 and EGR-1

Christine Skerka, Eva L. Decker, Peter F. Zipfel
1995 Journal of Biological Chemistry  
Activation of the interleukin 2 (IL-2) gene after antigen recognition is a critical event for T cell proliferation and effector function. Prior studies have identified several transcription factors that contribute to the activity of the IL-2 promoter in stimulated T lymphocytes. Here we describe a novel regulatory element within the IL-2 promoter located immediately upstream of the nuclear factor of activated T cell (NFAT) domain. This region (termed the zinc finger protein binding region
more » ... serves as binding site for two differently regulated zinc finger proteins: the constitutively expressed transcription factor Sp1 and the inducible early growth response protein EGR-1. In unstimulated cells which do not secrete IL-2, only Sp1 binds to this region, while in stimulated IL-2 secreting cells the inducible EGR-1 protein recognizes this element. In Jurkat T cells, the ZIP site serves as an activator for IL-2 gene expression, and a combination of ZIP and NFAT binding sites is required for maximal IL-2 promoter activity. These results suggest a critical role of the ZIP site for IL-2 promoter activity.
doi:10.1074/jbc.270.38.22500 pmid:7673240 fatcat:iqbzggq5kzexzbhm6oticasvtq