Expression of Hepatocyte Growth Factor-Like Protein Is Repressed by Retinoic Acid and Enhanced by Cyclic Adenosine 3',5'-Monophosphate Response Element-Binding Protein (CREB)-Binding Protein (CBP)

R. S. Muraoka
1999 Endocrinology  
In an effort to understand the molecular mechanisms involved in the regulation of expression of the gene encoding hepatocyte growth factor-like protein (HGFL), it was found that all-trans-retinoic acid dramatically represses expression of the endogenous HGFL gene in HepG2 cells, a human hepatocyte-derived cell line. This repression requires the sequence between nucleotides Ϫ135 and Ϫ105 in the 5Ј-flanking sequence of the HGFL gene, a site that has previously been shown to bind the transcription
more » ... factor hepatocyte nuclear factor-4 (HNF-4). Electrophoretic mobility shift analysis suggests that the retinoic acid receptor does not bind to this site, and that retinoic acid does not alter binding of HNF-4 to this DNA site. However, the transcriptional coactivator, CREB-binding protein (CBP) coactivates expression of this gene through an indirect interaction with the HNF-4-binding site, and overexpression of CBP in HepG2 cells eliminates retinoic acid repression of reporter gene expression driven by the HGFL promoter. Overexpression of CBP also protects the endogenous HGFL gene from down-regulation by retinoic acid. These results suggest that HGFL gene expression requires CBP, and competition for limiting amounts of CBP by retinoic acid receptor may be a means of modifying the activity of HNF-4 at the HGFL gene promoter.
doi:10.1210/en.140.1.187 pmid:9886825 fatcat:426itubtp5fpbgip37hqsnfwem