 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, February 1, 2000, 20(3):1073-1084
Septamer Element-Binding Proteins in Neuronal and Glial
Differentiation
Albert
Dobi1, 2,
Miklos
Palkovits3,
Christina G.
Palkovits1,
Mary A.
Ring1, 2, and
Denes
v.
Agoston1, 2
1 Laboratory of Developmental Neurobiology, National
Institute of Child Health and Development, National Institutes of
Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, 2 Department of Anatomy
and Cell Biology and Program in Neuroscience, School of Medicine,
Uniformed Services University, Bethesda, Maryland 20814, and
3 Laboratory of Genetics, National Institute of Mental
Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892
 |
ABSTRACT |
Differentiation of progenitors into neurons and glia is regulated
by interactions between regulatory DNA elements of neuron- and
glia-specific genes and transcription factors that are differentially expressed by progenitors at progressive stages of neural development. We have identified a novel DNA regulatory element (TTTGCAT = septamer) present on the enkephalin (ENK), neuronal cell adhesion
molecule, neurofilament of 68 kDa (NF68), growth-associated protein of
43 kDa, glial high-affinity glutamine transporter, tyrosine
hydroxylase, etc., genes. When septamer function was blocked by
introducing septamer competitor DNA into primary differentiating neural
cultures, mRNA levels of ENK, NF68, and glial fibrillary acidic protein decreased by 50-80%, whereas no effect was seen using a control DNA.
Septamer elements serve as binding sites for lineage-specific multimeric complexes assembled from three distinct nuclear proteins. Progenitors express a 16 kDa protein (p-sept)
which binds to DNA as a homodimer (detected as the 32 kDa P-band).
Cells that entered the neuronal lineage express an additional 29 kDa
protein (n-sept) that binds to the homodimerized
p-sept, and together they form a 62 kDa multimer
(detected as N-band). Cells that entered the glial lineage express a
distinct 23 kDa protein (g-sept), which along
with the homodimerized p-sept form a 56 kDa multimer
(observed as G-band). The binding of the distinct protein complexes (P, G, and N) to the septamer site causes a lineage-specific DNA bending (P = 53°; G = 72°; and N = 90°), which may
contribute to the regulatory effect of the septamer interaction. In
summary, septamer and its binding proteins represent novel protein-DNA
interactions that may contribute to the regulation of neuroglial
differentiation in the developing mammalian CNS.
Key words:
progenitors; neuron; glia; development; DNA molecular
decoy; DNA bending
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Neurons and glia of the adult
mammalian CNS are derived from multipotent progenitors that develop
into neurons and glia (Brustle and McKay, 1996 ; Lillien, 1998 ; Pincus
et al., 1998 ). At the level of transcriptional control,
neurodifferentiation is envisaged as a cascade of spatiotemporally
coordinated and cooperative interactions between regulatory DNA
elements of neuron- or glia-specific genes and transcription factors
that are differentially expressed in developing cells at progressive
stages of neural development (Lemke, 1993 ). However, the identity of
these transcription factors, as well as their coordinated interactions
that must occur during development, is poorly understood because of the
enormous complexity of the mammalian CNS. One approach to overcome this
complexity is to search for mammalian homologs of genes identified in
Drosophila or Caenorhabditis elegans (He and
Rosenfeld, 1991 ). Despite some setbacks, e.g., gcm (Kim et
al., 1998 ), this strategy has been successful (Rubenstein and Beachy,
1998 ). Another approach is to directly probe regulatory DNA fragments
from genes that specify a neuronal or glial phenotype with nuclear
proteins. Nuclear proteins isolated from distinct brain regions
obtained at different developmental stages will include transcription
factors that act at various stages of neural differentiation to specify
a neuronal phenotype (Dobi et al., 1997 ). These transcription factors
can be identified by the complexes that they form with their cognate
DNA targets in electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs) and by DNA
footprinting and can be purified and/or cloned. This approach can
therefore be used to identify the DNA motifs and their transcription
factors whose interactions guide neural precursors into a given phenotype.
We have focused on the enkephalin (ENK) gene as our model system for
defining the transcriptional events underlying neural differentiation.
Enkephalinergic neurons mediate social behavior, reward and aggression
(Martin et al., 1991 ; Konig et al., 1996 ). Because of their spatially
contrasting distribution they represent a convenient model system to
explore transcriptional regulation of phenotypic differentiation in
neural progenitors. We anticipated that interactions between nuclear
proteins derived from early embryonic brain [embryonic days 12-14
(E12-E14)] and DNA elements from the ENK gene would identify DNA
motifs that are involved in controlling general differentiation steps
such as the entry of progenitors into the neuronal or glial lineage.
DNA fragments used in our initial studies (Dobi et al., 1997 )
encompassed the entire regulatory region of the rodent ENK gene (Rosen
et al., 1984 ; Dobi et al., 1995a ; Agoston et al., 1998 ).
Our screening identified a novel DNA element (septamer), which, in
addition to the ENK gene, is also present on the regulatory regions of
neuron- and glia-specific genes. The septamer element serves as a
binding site for developmentally expressed nuclear proteins. Here we
describe the developmental distribution of septamer element recognition
factors, termed sept proteins, and their association with neuronal and
glial differentiation in the developing rat brain. Importantly, we
provide evidence that blocking septamer function by introducing
specific competitor DNA molecules into differentiating neural cultures
results in the downregulation of the expression of neuron- and
glia-specific genes. These results suggest a general regulatory role
for septamer interactions during neuroglial differentiation.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Microdissection of rat brain and preparation of
nuclear extracts
Dissection of the rat brain into various ontogenetically and
phenotypically distinct brain regions between embryonic stages E10-E21
and postnatal ages P2-P28 as well as the preparation and characterization of nuclear extracts from the dissected brain regions,
peripheral tissues, and cultured cells were performed as described
(Dobi et al., 1997 ). The broad-range protease inhibitor [4-(2-aminoethyl)-benzenesulfonyl fluoride hydrochloride] (AEBSF) was
used throughout the preparation of nuclear extracts and the subsequent
experiments. HeLa cell nuclear extracts were purchased from Stratagene
(La Jolla, CA) and CellTech (Minneapolis, MN).
Generation of restriction DNA fragments and
synthetic oligonucleotides
A DNA fragment corresponding to nucleotides -542 and -384 of the
rat ENK (rENK) gene was generated (Dobi et al., 1997 ) from the plasmid
pRESS1 (Joshi and Sabol, 1991 ) by PCR using sequence-specific primers
and was cloned into a pCRII plasmid vector (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA).
For binding studies, the 160 bp fragment rENK-542;-379 was released
from the plasmid by EcoRI digest, labeled by
[ -32P]dATP incorporation with Klenow
polymerase, and purified on 4% polyacryamide gel
(acrylamide/bisacrylamide, 40:1) in 1× Tris acetate-EDTA
buffer. The DNA fragment was excised from the gel and eluted. Ten
femtomoles of DNA probe were used per EMSA. Partly overlapping
subfragments were designed based on the consensus sequence information
available for the rENK gene (Durkin et al., 1992 ; S. Sabol and J. Joshi
personal communication; A. Dobi and D. v. Agoston, unpublished
results). A subfragment (rENK-496;-467) 5'-AAATATTGGTTTGCATAATCATTGACTGCC-3' retained all the
binding activity and therefore was used in subsequent studies.
Synthetic oligonucleotides were radioactively labeled by
[ -32P]dATP and polynucleotide kinase,
annealed to the complementary strand, and gel-purified as described
(Dobi et al., 1995a ).
EMSA
Binding reactions were performed as described (Dobi et al.,
1995a ). Briefly, 10 fmol of rENK-542;-379 or the synthetic probe rENK-496;-467 (Fig. 1) was added to 3 µg of nuclear extracts in the
presence of 0.2 mg/ml poly(dI·dC) (Boehringer Mannheim GmbH, Heidelberg, Germany) in binding buffer (12 mM HEPES, pH
7.9, 60 mM KCl, 1 mM
MgCl2, 0.2 mM EDTA, 0.5 mM DTT, 0.1 mM AEBSF, and 5% glycerol) in a
total volume of 10 µl. The reaction mixture was incubated at 25°C
for 20 min, and the complex was separated from the free probe by
electrophoresis on a 4% polyacrylamide gel (acrylamide/bisacrylamide,
40:1) in 1× Tris borate-EDTA (TBE) buffer at 12 W of constant power
for 2 hr at room temperature. Gels were fixed in 10% acetic acid,
transferred to Whatman (Maidstone, UK) 3MM paper, dried, subjected to
autoradiography, and analyzed in a PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics,
Sunnyvale, CA). In the competition assay, 1 pmol of unlabeled
competitor DNA was added to the reaction mixture before addition of the
nuclear extract, resulting in a 100-fold excess of the competitor DNA.
Methylation interference assay
Radioactively labeled rENK-542;-379 (see above) was further cut
by BsmAI restriction endonuclease and gel-purified. The G residues were methylated by dimethyl sulfate using the Maxam-Gilbert sequencing kit according to the manufacturer's instructions (DuPont, Boston, MA). Eighty femtomoles of probe (6 × 106 cpm/pmol) were combined with 40 µg
of nuclear extracts derived from E16 striatum in the presence of 15 µg of poly(dI·dC) in binding buffer (see above) in a total volume
of 100 µl. The optimal amount of protein required was determined by
titration. The mixture was incubated at room temperature for 30 min.
The bound and free fractions were separated on a 4% polyacrylamide gel
as above. The gel was autoradiographed, and subsequently the bound and
free fractions were excised and eluted by soaking overnight at 37°C
in 400 µl of elution buffer (0.5 M
NH4OAc, 0.1% SDS, 2 mM
EDTA, and 10% methanol). The eluted probes were extracted with
phenol/chloroform and precipitated with ethanol twice in the presence
of 10 µg of glycogen. The pellets were washed with 70% ethanol,
dried, and subjected to chemical cleavage (Maxam and Gilbert, 1977 ).
The DNA was lyophilized twice and dissolved in
H2O, and the activity was adjusted to 2000 cpm/µl. Three microliters of samples were mixed with 3 µl of 90%
formamide and loading dyes, heated to 95°C for 3 min. Three thousand
counts per minute of sample were analyzed in each lane of a 6%
polyacrylamide, 7 M urea, TBE sequencing gel.
After the separation, the gel was exposed to x-ray film at 70°C for
72 hr. The identity of the core binding site, designated septamer motif
(underlined sequence, see above), was independently identified using
EMSA in combination with the left-to-right and right-to-left truncated
probe strategy (Dobi et al., 1995b ; data not shown).
Antibody supershift assay
Antibodies raised against Oct-1 (a kind gift from Dr. L. Staudt,
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD) and Oct-2 proteins (Santa
Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA) were tested under two conditions:
(1) 3 µg of nuclear extracts were incubated with 10 ng of either
anti-Oct-1 rabbit polyclonal IgG or anti-Oct-2 rabbit polyclonal IgG in
binding buffer (see above) in the presence of 10 µg of BSA and 0.2 mg/ml of poly(dI·dC) at 0°C for 40 min in a total volume of 10 µl; 10 fmol of radioactively labeled rENK-542;-379 probe were added
to the reaction mixture and incubated at room temperature for an
additional 30 min. ("pre"); and (2) in a second set of experiments,
10 fmol of the radioactively labeled probe were first incubated with 3 µg of nuclear extracts as above, followed by addition of 10 ng of
either anti-Oct-1 rabbit polyclonal IgG or anti-Oct-2 rabbit polyclonal
IgG; the reaction mixtures were incubated at 4°C for 40 min. In
control reactions, 3 µg of HeLa nuclear extract was tested under
identical conditions. Complexes were separated and analyzed by EMSA as above.
Cell cultures
Astrocytes. Cortical astrocytes were obtained from
1-d-old neonatal (Sprague Dawley) rats as described (McCarthy and de
Vellis, 1980 ). After replating confluent cells, astrocytes were grown in DMEM with high glucose and 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, containing 10% fetal bovine serum. Cells were harvested; nuclear
proteins and cytoplasmic total RNA were prepared as previously
described (Dobi et al., 1995a ).
Expanding cultures of striatal progenitors. Cells derived
from E16 striatum were isolated and cultured in the presence of 10 ng/ml basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) as mitogen as described (Johe et al., 1996 ). After 6 d of mitotic expansion in the
presence of bFGF, differentiation was initiated by removing bFGF and
culturing cells in serum-free medium. Some cultures were harvested at
the end of the expansion period (+bFGF); others were harvested 3 d after withdrawal of the mitogen (bFGF withdrawn). Cell culture medium
was removed by aspiration; cultures were washed with 1 × PBS, and
after removal of PBS culture dishes were frozen on dry ice. Nuclear
extracts were prepared using the microprocedure adopted for cultured
cells, and total cellular RNA was prepared from cytoplasmic
supernatants as described (Dobi et al., 1995a ).
Differentiating neural cultures of rat embryonic forebrain.
Forebrains were dissected from E15.5 embryos and collected in ice-cold
D1 solution as previously described (Agoston et al., 1991 ). After
several steps of washing with equilibrated Earl's balanced salt
solution the brains were minced with sterile blades and dissociated by
using the papain dissociation system according to the manufacturer's
instructions (Worthington, Lakewood, NJ). The resulting cell suspension
was diluted with equilibrated MEM containing 10% bovine serum, 10%
heat-inactivated horse serum, N3 nutrient mixture (Brenneman et al.,
1987 ), 2.5 mM glutamine, and anibiotic-antimycotic mixture
(Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD), and the number of viable cells
was determined by the trypan blue exclusion technique. Cells were
plated at the density of 400,000/ml in
poly-L-lysine-precoated tissue culture flasks. Medium was
changed 12 hr after plating, corresponding to 0.5 d in
vitro (DIV), to MEM containing 5% heat-inactivated horse serum,
N3, 2.5 mM glutamine, and antibiotic-antimycotic
mixture (Life Technologies). Some cultures received a mixture of
5'-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridine and uridine (FUDR) at final concentrations of
15 and 35 µg/ml, respectively, to block cellular proliferation. At
this concentration FUDR completely blocks proliferation without causing
death of the mitotically arrested cells (Brenneman et al., 1987 ).
Cultures were harvested at 2.5 DIV by the removal of the medium by
aspiration and placing the flasks on dry ice. Nuclear extracts and
cytoplasmic supernatants were prepared using the microprocedure as
above. Total cytoplasmic RNA was extracted and reverse-transcribed for PCR characterization of gene expression pattern of the cultures as
above. As RT-PCR analysis has demonstrated, these culture conditions were permissive for nestin-expressing as well as neurofilament of 68 kDa (NF68)- and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)-expressing cells.
Embryonic striatal cultures for DNA competition assay.
Striata were dissected from E17 embryonic rat brains and dissociated by
using the papain dissociation system as above. Cells were plated in MEM
containing 5% heat-inactivated horse serum, N3, 2.5 mM glutamine, and anibiotic-antimycotic mixture (Life Technologies) at the
density of 150,000 cells/ml in poly-L-lysine-precoated 24 well plates. Medium was changed 12 hr after plating.
DNA competition assay. The assay was performed essentially
as described for DNA molecular decoy (Yamashita et al., 1998 ). As
competitor DNA molecule the synthetic DNA fragment rENK-496;-467 previously tested in EMSA was used (see above). For control competitor DNA, a transversion mutant of the septamer DNA element was created (the
core TTTGCAT was replaced by GGGTACG), leaving the flanks identical
(septamermut). EMSA showed that the
mutated fragment failed to bind nuclear proteins (data not shown). The
competitor and control DNA molecules were introduced into cells by
using the polyethyleneimine delivery system as described (Boussif et
al., 1995 ). Four to 6 hr after transfection, the medium was changed,
and cells were cultured as above. Cultures were harvested 2 d
after DNA decoy and processed for RNA extraction followed by reverse transcription.
RNA preparation, reverse transcription, and PCR
Total cellular RNAs were prepared by using the RNeasy technique
(Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Equal amounts of RNA were reverse-transcribed using oligo-dT priming in the Superscript II system according to the manufacturer's instructions (Life Technologies). PCR conditions and
primers for ENK, NF68, GFAP, and cyclophilin primers were as described
earlier (Dobi et al., 1995a ). Cyclin D2 (cycD2) primers were as
published (Freeman et al.,
1994 ).Nestinprimers(5'-ACTGAGGATAAGGCAGAGTTGC-3' and 5'-GAGTCTTGTTCACCTGCTTGG-3') were designed using the
GeneWorks program (Oxford Molecular, Campbell, CA) using the
rat nestin gene sequence (GenBank accession number M34384). PCR
reactions were performed as described (Dobi et al., 1995a ). PCR
amplicons were separated on 5-20% acrylamide gels (Novex, San Diego,
CA) or thin agarose gels (Dobi et al., 1997 ). Bands were visualized and
quantified either in a PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics) or in an
Eastman Kodak (Rochester, NY) SP700 imaging system after SYBR
green-I (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) staining.
UV cross-linking in solution
A synthetic septamer oligonucleotide for UV cross-linking was
designed to form a partial hairpin structure with a recessed 3' end
(5'-GTCAATGATTATGCAAACCAATATTTGCGTCAGGCTAGCCTGACG-3';
also see Fig. 1). The purified oligonucleotide was annealed to allow formation of the hairpin in Klenow polymerase buffer (80 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 8.3, 25 mM MgCl2) at
room temperature for 10 min. The recessive end was filled in with
deoxynucleotides and [ -32P]dATP using
Klenow polymerase. The labeled double-stranded DNA was gel-purified,
and ~30 fmol of probe (2 × 107
cpm/pmol) was combined with 3 µg of nuclear extract from either E14
or E16 rat striatum in the presence of 0.2 µg/µl poly(dI·dC) in
binding buffer in a total volume of 30 µl and incubated at room
temperature for 30 min. The UV cross-linking in solution was performed
by exposing the binding reaction mixtures to 0.12 J of UV light
for 4 hr at 4°C. Part of the reaction mixture was incubated with 1 U
of DNase I (Worthington Biochemical, Freehold, NJ) at room temperature
for 5 min. To remove phosphate groups from the proteins, 0.3 U of
protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B and 0.3 U of protein phosphatase
type-2A (specific for phosphoseryl and phosphothreonyl proteins;
Upstate Biotechnology, Lake Placid, NY) were added to the reaction
mixtures, which were then incubated for 15 min at 30°C. All solutions
included 0.5 mM of the protease inhibitor AEBSF. The
complexes were analyzed on a 4-20% gradient Tris-glycine/SDS gel (Novex).
Combined chemical and UV cross-linking
A synthetic oligonucleotide containing the septamer element for
UV cross-linking was designed to form a partial doublet hairpin structure with a recessive 3' end and prepared as above. Approximately 10 fmol of probe (2 × 107 cpm/pmol)
was combined with 3 µg of nuclear extract from either E14 or E16
striatum in the presence of 0.2 µg/µl of poly(dI·dC) in binding
buffer (see above) in a total volume of 10 µl and incubated at room
temperature for 30 min. The DNA-protein complex was separated from the
free probe on a 4% polyacrylamide gel in TBE buffer. After
electrophoresis, the gel was laid on a plastic wrap and slid onto a
previously developed x-ray film and transferred onto the top of a ready
pack X-Omat AR film (Kodak) along with position markers. The gel-film
sandwich was put in a UV Stratalinker oven (Stratagene) and covered
with a thin layer of 1% glutaraldehyde (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) where
indicated. Before the actual experiment, the optimal concentration of
glutaraldehyde was determined by titration. The UV cross-linking was
performed with 0.12 J of energy for 4 hr at 4°C so that exposure
to the x-ray film, the DNA-protein cross-linking with UV light, and the
protein-protein cross-linking with glutaraldehyde were performed
simultaneously. The positions of the DNA-protein complexes and free
DNA were identified after developing the film. The DNA-protein
complexes and the free probe were excised from the gel and analyzed on
4-20% gradient Tris-glycine/SDS gel (Novex).
Circular permutation assay
A 26 mer synthetic oligonucleotide containing the septamer
element along with flanks (-467;-496 bp of the ENK gene; Fig. 1) was
inserted into the pBend5 plasmid (a generous gift from Drs. Sankar
Adhya and Jin Kim, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of
Health, Bethesda, MD) using XbaI and SalI
restriction sites. The resulted pBend5/sept plasmid was cut by
NruI, EcoRV, BamHI, ClaI,
and MluI restriction endonucleases. The resulting 146-bp-long fragments were radioactively labeled at the ends by polynucleotide kinase (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) and
[ -32P]ATP (Amersham, Arlington
Heights, IL) and gel-purified. Reaction mixtures for DNA-protein
binding reactions were prepared as described above, except that a 5 fmol labeled fragment was combined with 1 µg of nuclear extracts
derived from either E14 or E15 striatum. The electrophoretic separation
was performed in 8% polyacrylamide gel (acrylamide/bis, 40:1, w/w) in
1× TBE buffer under 13 W of constant power. After separation the gel
was fixed, dried, and subjected to autoradiography. To estimate the DNA
bending angles, the relative migration values were measured, and the
approximate " " values were calculated as described (Kim et al.,
1989 ). Because the mobilities of the free probes showed only
insignificant variations, corrections for free probe mobility
differences were unnecessary.
 |
RESULTS |
The septamer motif is the binding site for nuclear proteins of the
developing brain
The initial screening for specific protein-DNA interactions using
the PCR fragment rENK-542;-379 corresponding to the 5' regulatory region of the rENK gene and nuclear extract derived from E18 striatum showed specific and abundant DNA-protein duplexes marked as N- and G-
bands (Fig. 1A). Toward
the identification of the binding site, synthetic subfragments of
rENK-542;-379 were tested in EMSA,and rENK-496;-467 formed a doublet
that could be specifically competed only by excess original fragment
(rENK-542;-379) but not by unrelated DNA.

View larger version (58K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Nuclear proteins from embryonic brain
bind to septamer, a novel DNA motif, in gel mobility shift (EMSA) and
footprinting assays. A, EMSA with nuclear extract from
E17 striatum and either the entire 163 bp (rENK-542;-379) fragment or
the 30 bp septamer-containing subfragment (reNK-496;-467) as
radiolabeled probes. The cold competitors were either the rENK-542;-379
fragment or unrelated dsDNA. The sequence of the DNA probe
rENK-542;-379 containing the septamer motif (in
boldface) is depicted. The box marks the
position and sequence of the 30 bp synthetic DNA oligonucleotide
related to rENK-542;-379. Each probe displays a similar pattern of
specific protein-DNA complexes: two closely spaced complexes, with the
lower-mobility band expressed in lower amounts. The difference in the
relative mobilities of complexes formed from the two probes is the
result of the differences in length between the two probes (163 vs 30 bp). Ø, No competitor; FP, indicates
free probe. B, DNA methylation interference footprinting
of rENK-542;-379 with nuclear extract for E18 striatum identifies the
septamer motif (boldface) as the binding site. The G
nucleotide positioned at 484 showed interference
(asterisk), whereas no interference was seen at the G
residue at 488 (arrow). M, G reaction
marker; N, neuron-specific complex; G,
glia-specific complex; F, free probe. C,
Antibody supershift assay with nuclear extracts from E18 striatum and
HeLa cells and rENK-542;-379 as probe. Nuclear proteins were
preincubated with the antibodies overnight before addition of the probe
(pre), or antibodies were added after formation
of the DNA-protein complex (post). As a positive
control, nuclear extracts derived from HeLa cells were used. HeLa cells
express both Oct-1 and Oct-2-binding proteins, which form complexes of
distinct mobilities (arrow, open
arrowhead). Preincubation of the nuclear extracts with Oct-1 or
Oct-2 antibodies (pre) resulted in a dramatically
altered mobility of the complexes (supershift, marked by
circle). D, The P complex present in E14
striatum can only be competed with septamer but not with octamer
sequence. The N and the G complexes present in E18 striatum could,
however, be competed by septamer as well as to some extent by the
octamer sequence. Unrelated double-stranded (ds) and
single-stranded (ss) DNA did not compete.
FP, Free probe.
|
|
To determine the site of base-specific interactions, we performed DNA
methylation interference footprinting (Fig. 1B).
Footprinting showed a strong specific interaction between the binding
proteins and the internal G-nucleotide at position -484 (star) of an
octamer-like motif
(TTGG488TTTG484CATAATC,
underlined sequence here and boldface in Fig.
1B). Very importantly however, the 5' purine base at
position 488 (arrow) was not involved in DNA-protein
interactions, unlike the case for octamer-binding proteins. Because
there was no base-specific interaction at the 5' purine base, we named
the DNA element septamer motif.
Because of the sequence similarities between octamer DNA elements and
the septamer motif, we anticipated that Oct-1 polyclonal antibody would
recognize the septamer-binding proteins forming the N- and G-bands
(Fig. 1A), and this recognition would result in the
supershifting of the formed DNA-protein complexes. However, neither
the anti-Oct-1 nor anti-Oct-2 antibodies recognized the nuclear
proteins in the N and G complexes (Fig. 1C). This
experiment suggested that proteins that bind to the septamer motif are
distinct from the known proteins that bind to the octamer-element. In
control experiments, the presence of anti-Oct-1 or anti-Oct-2
antibodies resulted in supershifted complexes when nuclear extracts
from HeLa cells were tested (Fig. 1C).
We performed competition assays using the rENK-496;-467 synthetic
fragment that contains the septamer site or a DNA fragment of equal
length that contained the consensus oct-1 site as competitors (Fig.
1D). These experiments showed that the early, P-band
(see below) was highly specific to the septamer motif. Binding was eliminated when the septamer-containing DNA competitor was used. The
presence of excess octamer competitor did not affect binding The N- and
G-bands detected in E18 striatum were also successfully competed with
septamer DNA. However, some degree of competition was also observed
with octamer-containing DNA.
The different septamer complexes are associated with distinct
cellular phenotypes
To obtain the precise spatiotemporal distribution of the
septamer-binding proteins, we probed nuclear proteins derived from various brain regions at distinct stages of neurodifferentiation with
rENK-496;-467 (for sequence, see Fig. 1A). This
screening revealed an interesting spatiotemporal distribution of the
three previously observed protein-DNA complexes P, N, and G (Fig.
1D). The single, medium-mobility band marked as P
that was detected in the striatal primordium at E14 was also seen in
all tested brain regions except the pons and medulla oblongata at E14
(Fig. 2A). Subsequent
analysis, however, showed the presence of the P-band in E10-E12
rhombencephalon (data not shown). RT-PCR analysis of the corresponding
cytoplasmic supernatants demonstrated the expression of nestin and
cycD2 mRNA in these brain regions, suggesting the presence of
proliferating neural progenitors (Fig. 2B). Neither NF68 nor GFAP mRNA, the markers for differentiated neurons and astroglia, was detected at this stage. Because of the expression of
nestin and cycD2 mRNA and because the spatiotemporal pattern of P-band
correlated with the generation of neural progenitors in the various
brain primordia, we designated this complex "P" for progenitors. In
the developing brain, the P-band was not detected after E14 except in
the cerebellum, where the P-band reappeared between P2 and P8 (Fig.
2A). The P-band was not detected in any brain regions
of the adult brain except the olfactory bulb and the hippocampus (Fig.
2D).



View larger version (525469K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
Septamer-binding proteins are associated with
different cellular population in the developing rat CNS.
A, Spatiotemporal distribution of septamer-binding
proteins using the rENK-496;-467 fragment as probe in various brain
regions between E14 and P28 by EMSA. P indicates the
formation of a distinct mobility at early stages of neurodevelopment
marking the generation of neuroepithelial progenitor cells.
N indicates a complex whose formation coincides with
neurogenesis, and G band indicates a complex whose
formation coincides with gliogenesis; DE, diencephalon;
SP, striatal primordium; PW,
prosencephalic wall; CP, cerebellar primordium;
Cortex, frontoparietal cortex. B, PCR
amplicons indicating the abundance of selected markers as measured by
RT-PCR; Cyclop, cyclophilin. C, P
complex is formed in all primordial regions of the forebrain (striatal
primordium, prosencephalic wall, and diencephalon), which all express
nestin and cyclin D2 mRNA (bottom panels).
D, Hippocampus and olfactory bulb contain the P-band
both in early postnatal age (P2) and in adult (P28). Liver does not
contain any of the septamer-binding proteins. E,
Cultured primary cortical astrocytes contain only G-band, whereas the
age-equivalent cortex has both N- and G-bands. F, EMSA
of nuclear proteins derived from a striatal progenitor cell culture
6 d after mitogen treatment (+bFGF) shows
the presence of all three bands, but 3 d after the mitogen was
removed (bFGF withdrawn), only the G-band can be
detected. The high-mobility bands were primarily detected when the
abundant G-band was also seen. G, EMSA of nuclear
proteins derived from E16 rat forebrain cultures grown for 2 d in
the absence or in the presence of the mitotic inhibitor FUDR.
Substantially decreased G-band and GFAP mRNA levels were measured in
the FUDR-treated cultures, whereas N-band and NF68 mRNA remained
unchanged. C-G, bottom panels, Abundance of markers as
in D.
|
|
After E14, the lower-mobility double band (Fig. 1D,
marked as N, G) was also detected in all other
brain regions tested (Fig. 2A). Again, this doublet
was observed in the ontogenetically earliest region, the pons and
medulla oblongata, at E14 when other brain primordia (diencephalon,
striatal primordium, and telencephalon) contained only the P-band (Fig.
2A,C). However, the spatiotemporal pattern of
appearance and disappearance of the N- and G-bands closely resembled
the developmental appearance of developing neurons and glia, which
varies among ontogenetically distinct brain regions (Fig.
2A). For example, in the striatum, the most abundant
N-band was observed at E18, which is the peak activity of neurogenesis (Bayer and Altman, 1995 ; Fig. 2A). In the developing
cerebral cortex, the N-band was most abundant between E16 and E18, but it remained detectable at early postnatal ages, consistent with a
longer period of neurogenesis in this brain region. There were no
detectable complexes in the adult (>P28) cerebral cortex or any other
brain regions. RT-PCR analysis of the gene expression pattern showed
that the decrease and disappearance of nestin mRNA expression and the
appearance of the neuronal marker NF68 mRNA corresponded to the
developmental appearance of the N-band in the various brain regions
(Fig. 2A,B). Similarly, the spatiotemporal appearance
of the G-band preceded the developmental appearance of GFAP mRNA, the
marker for astroglia (Fig. 2A,B). These observations supported the hypothesis that the appearance of N-band marks an early
developmental event for neuronal precursors, such as the entry of
neural progenitors into the neuronal lineage or an early stage of
neuronal differentiation. We also hypothesized that the appearance of
the G-band marks the entry of progenitors into the glial lineage or an
early stage of glial differentiation. In addition to the N- and
G-bands, we frequently observed high-mobility complexes in several
brain regions at E16 (Fig. 2A). These high-mobility complexes, which were also detected in astrocytic cultures (Fig. 2E) and were enhanced after mitogen withdrawal of
striatal cultures (Fig. 2F), probably consist of
dissociated and cleaved components of the septamer multimers (see below).
The association of P-, N-, and G-bands with distinct developmental
stages was further investigated by using various cell culture systems.
We compared the presence of the various (P-, N-, and G-) bands in
microdissected cerebral cortex at P8 to age-related cortical astrocytes
in culture. Cerebral cortex contained both N and G complexes; however,
only the G-band was detected in age-equivalent cortical astrocyte
cultures (Fig. 2E). In accord with the EMSA results,
RT-PCR analysis demonstrated the expression of GFAP mRNA in astrocytic
cultures whereas both GFAP and NF68 mRNA were detected in P8 cerebral
cortex (Fig. 2E). None of the three complexes (P-, N-, and G-bands) was observed in any peripheral tissues at any ages
tested (Fig. 2D; data not shown).
We also tested a striatal culture system developed by Johe et al.
(1996) . The culture originated from E16 striatum and was treated
with the mitogen bFGF for 6 d. When these cultures were analyzed
at the end of bFGF expansion (corresponding to E22 in vivo),
the P-band as well as abundant N- and G-bands were detected (Fig.
2F). After withdrawal of mitogen, all cells
differentiated into astrocytes, as indicated by the abundant G-band and
GFAP mRNA. P-band, N-band, and NF68 mRNA were undetectable; however, a
low amount of nestin mRNA was detected (Fig. 2F).
A positive association of the N-band with differentiating neurons was
also established by taking advantage of the distinct onset of
neurogenesis and gliogenesis in the developing CNS. Because blocking
cellular proliferation after the majority of neurons are postmitotic
but gliogenesis is ongoing should reduce G-band and GFAP mRNA levels
but should leave N-band and NF68 mRNA relatively unchanged, developing
neural cultures derived from E15 rat forebrain were treated with FUDR
starting at 1 DIV (E16) for 2 d. Blocking cellular proliferation
within this developmental period resulted in a substantial decrease in
the intensity of the G-band complex on EMSA and the GFAP mRNA by
RT-PCR, whereas the intensities of N-band and NF68 mRNA remained
virtually unaffected (Fig. 2G). These results further
support the hypothesis that N- and G-bands are associated with
differentiating neurons and glia, respectively.
The septamer motif is present on various neuronal- and
glial-specific genes
The relative abundance and the developmentally regulated
appearance of the P-, N-, and G-complexes in the developing
rat CNS suggested that the septamer motif may be a DNA regulatory
element central to neural differentiation, and as such, it should be
present within the regulatory regions of neuronal- and glial-specific genes. Searching the database (GenBank) for genes containing the septamer motif confirmed this assumption. The septamer motif was found
on the 5' regulatory regions of many neuronal- or glial-specific genes.
These genes include substance P/neurokinin, NF68, growth-associated protein of 43 kDa (GAP-43), neuron cell adhesion molecule, and glial
high-affinity glutamate transporter and vimentin (Table 1).
Blocking the binding of septamer-binding proteins alters
gene expression
To gain insight as to the possible function of the septamer motif
and its binding proteins, we used a competitor double-stranded (ds) DNA
molecule to decoy septamer proteins from their endogenous DNA binding
sites. This approach has been successfully used in numerous model
systems and permits functional studies before the cloning of the
DNA-binding protein or transcription factor of interest (Morishita et
al., 1998 ). Differentiating striatal cultures at E18 were transfected
with the competitor dsDNA. The competitor molecule contained the
septamer motif (rENK-496;-467; for sequence information, see Fig.
1A). The control DNA contained a transversion mutant
(purine to pyrimidine substitution) of the septamer motif (septamermut) in which the purine to
pyrimidine substitution resulted in the loss of protein binding as
tested by EMSA (data not shown). The relative abundance of neuronal and
glial markers (ENK, NF68, and GFAP) was decreased in cultures after
transfection with the wild-type septamer motif containing dsDNA (Fig.
3). ENK mRNA levels decreased by 80%,
whereas NF68 and GFAP mRNA levels were ~60% lower than in cultures
transfected with septamermut. The
abundance of cyclophilin mRNA did not changed significantly. There were
no significant difference between cultures that were transfected with
the septamermut DNA and nontransfected
controls. The effects were highly reproducible (n = 6).

View larger version (30K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
Effect of blocking septamer function in
differentiating neural cultures by introducing exogenous competitor DNA
molecule. Shown are results of RT-PCR analysis of gene expression
patterns after the introduction of rENK-496;-467 as competitor DNA
(septamer, solid bar) and a mutated control DNA
(septamermut, hatched bars).
cycloph, Cyclophilin. Values are expressed as percentage
of the relative intensities obtained from control cultures that did not
receive DNA. Error bars indicate SEM (n = 6).
|
|
Lineage-specific protein components of the
Septamer-binding complex
To identify the proteins that bind to the septamer motif and form
the P-, N-, and G-bands, we performed both solution- and EMSA-mediated
(two-dimensional) UV cross-linking experiments with and without
simultaneous chemical cross-linking reactions. A DNA probe containing
the septamer motif (rENK-496;-467) was UV cross-linked to nuclear
proteins derived from E14 or E16 striatum. By EMSA, only the P-band was
observed at E14, whereas at E16 no P-band but both N- and G-bands were
detected (Fig. 2A,C). After UV cross-linking, however, there were no differences seen in the size of the protein-DNA complex derived form the E14 or E16 striatum (Fig.
4A; compare lanes
1, 4). After deducting the size of the DNA
probe, the size of the DNA-binding proteins was found to be 32 kDa in
both E14 and E16 striatum. In addition to the identical size,
incubation with DNase I and/or dephosphorylation of cross-linked
proteins from E14 and E16 striatum resulted in identical changes in gel electrophoretic mobilities (Fig. 4A; lanes
2, 5, 3, 6). These observations suggested that the core DNA binding protein may be identical in all three complexes (P, N, and G).

View larger version (51K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
Identification of septamer-binding
proteins by UV cross-linking. A, Radioactively labeled
rENK-496;-467 probe was combined with nuclear extracts from E14 and E16
striatum and was irradiated in solution with UV light. One-third of the
cross-linked DNA-protein complex was analyzed without further
treatments (lanes 1, 4); one-third
was additionally incubated with DNase I (see Materials and Methods;
lanes 2, 5); and one-third of the
cross-linked mixture was incubated with both DNase I and protein
phosphatases (PPTase; lanes 3,
6). The complexes were analyzed on 4-20%
SDS-polyacrylamide gel. A filled circle indicates the UV
cross-linked protein-DNA complex; an asterisk marks the
cross-linked and subsequently DNase I-treated complex; a number
sign indicates UV cross-linked complexes after
dephosphorylation. Numbers at the left
figure indicate the position of molecular size markers in kilodaltons.
B, Septamer-binding complexes were separated in the
first dimension by EMSA followed by UV cross-linking the probe to
the core-binding protein. The filled circle indicates a
32 kDa core DNA-binding protein,which is identical in P, N, and G
complexes (lanes 2-4, 6, filled circles;
also see A). A diamond indicates a
protein of 16 kDa, likely the monomeric unit of the DNA-binding
protein. Chemical cross-linking enhances the dimerization of this
protein (lane 6). An arrowhead
indicates the N complex of 84 kDa (lane 7), from
which the size of the N-specific protein can be calculated as 29 kDa
(see Materials and Methods for details). A square marks
the G-specific complex (lane 8; 78 kDa) from which the
size of the G-specific protein has been calculated to be 23 kDa.
Molecular weight markers are in lane 9.
|
|
The identical appearance of UV cross-linked DNA-protein complexes in
both E14 and E16 striatum (Fig. 4A) sharply contrasts with the distinct mobility of P, N, and G complexes detected by EMSA
(Fig. 2, compare A, C). The identity of proteins forming the
various complexes was investigated by a novel combination of
EMSA-mediated chemical and UV cross-linking experiments (see Materials
and Methods). EMSA-mediated UV cross-linking experiments confirmed that
the basic DNA-binding protein in all three complexes (P, N, and G) is
32 kDa (Fig. 4B, EMSA I). In
addition, a smaller protein-DNA complex was also detected in all three
(P-, N-, and G-) bands (Fig. 4B, EMSA I,
diamond, lanes 2-4 and markers) after UV
cross-linking. The deduced size of this smaller protein is 16 kDa, half
the size of the larger protein (32 kDa). The 16 kDa protein most likely
represents the monomer unit of the septamer-binding protein, because
after chemical cross-linking, the smaller form was undetectable (Fig.
4B, EMSA II, lanes 6-8). Loss
of the 16 kDa monomeric form would occur as the equilibrium shifts from monomer to dimer in the presence of chemical cross-linker, and in the
P-band only the 32 kDa form was detectable after chemical cross-linking
(Fig. 4B, lane 6, filled circle). The 16 kDa protein was named p-sept. Performing a combination of chemical and
UV cross-linking on the P-, N-, and G-bands that were excised after EMSA resulted in the identification of additional proteins (Fig. 4B, EMSA II, lanes 7, 8). The
combination of chemical and UV cross-linking of the excised N-band
identified an 84 kDa complex (filled triangle). After
deducting 32 kDa for the homodimerized p-sept and 22 kDa for
the free DNA probe from 84 kDa, the size of the N-specific protein was
calculated to be 29 kDa (Fig. 4B, molecular size
panel). This protein was named n-sept. Similar
calculations indicated that the size of the G-specific protein
(filled rectangle) is 23 kDa (Fig.
4B, lane 8). This protein was named
g-sept. Similar procedures with the excised P-band resulted
only in the detection of the 32 kDa p-sept homodimer (Fig.
4B, lane 6, filled circle), but no
additional proteins were apparent. The molecular size of p-sept was independently confirmed by Southwestern analysis
using nuclear proteins derived from E15.5 striatum (data not shown).
The various Sept complexes bend the DNA in a
lineage-specific manner
Using a circular permutation assay we addressed the question of
whether the distinct Sept-binding protein complexes can specifically affect DNA structure as measured by DNA bending. As the DNA changes its
linear shape to a more "V"-shape configuration, so does the migration of the complex. A bending site closer to the center of the
probe results in a higher degree of change in the overall shape of the
DNA than a bending site closer to either end. The resulting change in
the overall shape of the complex can be detected by electrophoretic
mobility shift assay; furthermore, the bending angles can be estimated
from the electrophoretic migration differences. The circular
permutation assay indicated that septamer-binding proteins indeed bend
the DNA on DNA-protein complex formation (Fig.
5A). Moreover, the bending
angle was distinct for each of the lineage-specific complexes (P, G,
and N). The P-binding protein(s) present at E14 bent the DNA for
53 ± 4° (Fig. 5B). The formation of G complex (made
of two P proteins plus the G-specific protein) resulted in an increased
bending angle up to 72 ± 3° of the DNA. The N complex (the
addition of the N protein to the P homodimer) made the DNA bend even
more, with a bending angle of 90 ± 2°.

View larger version (30K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
Distinct bending effects of the various
septamer binding protein complexes. A, In a circular
permutation assay five radioactively labeled DNA fragments contain the
septamer element at the various positions relative to fr.C derived from
pBENDrENK (probes 1-5, bottom panel). All five
fragments were tested with proteins present at E14
(P) and E15 (P, G, N).
Different extents of DNA bending are shown as migrational differences
of protein-DNA complexes using probes 1-5. FP,
Migration of the free probe. The box indicates the
relative position of the septamer element within the fragment.
B, Diagram summarizing the protein components that bind
to the septamer motif and bend the DNA in lineage-dependent manner that
can regulate gene expression. The P-band observed by EMSA in primordial
brain regions (also see Fig. 2A,C) is composed of
the homodimerized 16 kDa p-sept protein (also see Fig.
4B). The G-band associated with glial precursors also
contains the homodimerized p-sept as the DNA
binding domain to which the g-sept of 23 kDa in
molecular weight binds (also see Fig. 4B). Together they
form a 55 kDa multimer detected by EMSA as G-band. The DNA binding unit
of the N-band associated with neuronal precursors is also composed of
the homodimerized p-sept to which a 29 kDa protein,
n-sept, binds (also see Fig. 4B).
Together they form the 62 kDa multimer detected as N-band by
EMSA.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Our approach to elucidate the transcriptional controls underlying
neural differentiation using the ENK gene as a model system has yielded
the following findings: (1) the identification of septamer, a novel DNA
element present within the regulatory regions of some neuronal- and
glial-specific genes; (2) the functional indication from "decoy"
experiments that septamer proteins may act as positive regulators
during neurodifferentiation; (3) the biochemical characterization of
three distinct nuclear proteins (p-sept, n-sept, and
g-sept) that form distinct septamer DNA-containing complexes
specific to cells of the progenitor, neuronal and glial lineages; and
(4) the demonstration that the distinct septameric protein complexes
bend the DNA in a lineage-specific manner that can significantly
contribute to the regulatory action in the developing CNS.
The binding site was named septamer because it required seven
nucleotides in the core sequence for specific binding
(TTTG*CAT; boldface and asterisk indicating the
base-specific interaction). The site is similar to octamer elements,
such as the Oct-1 motif (ATTTGCAT) present
within the regulatory regions of large numbers of genes with diverse
functions (Rosenfeld, 1991 ; Verrijzer and Van der Vliet, 1993 ). Of
particular note is the crucial requirement of the 5' purine nucleotide
(A, see above boldface and underlined) for octamer binding
(Verrijzer and Van der Vliet, 1993 ), which is not needed for septamer
binding (see Fig. 1B). This level of binding
specificity is not without precedent (Ryoo and Mann, 1999 ), because
sequences flanking the core-binding site may contribute to binding
specificity (Saade et al., 1997 ; Swanson and Yang, 1999 ). Additional
studies using purified sept proteins are required to identify the role
of flanking nucleotides in septamer binding. Proteins of the
Brn family are predominantly expressed in the developing
mammalian CNS, but their recognition site is distinct from the oct-1
motif (Wegner et al., 1993 ); on the other hand, Oct-1 and
Oct-2 are not expressed in the brain (Wegner et al., 1993 ;
Eraly et al., 1998 ). Importantly, p-sept that directly binds
to the DNA does not bind to the octamer motif (Fig. 1C). Moreover, sept proteins were not recognized by any of the different polyclonal anti-Oct-1 and Oct-2 antibodies. These findings, along with
the estimated molecular mass for the various septamer proteins, strongly suggest that these are distinct from any known POU and octamer-binding proteins (Wegner et al., 1993 ).
The septamer element has been found within the regulatory regions of
genes encoding neurotransmitters, transporters, receptors, surface
molecule, and neuron-specific cytoskeletal elements (Table 1). The list
most likely is incomplete because of the low number of GenBank entries
for regulatory DNA regions. Therefore it is conceivable that
septamer-binding proteins will be found on many more neuronal- and
glial-specific genes. We have performed functional studies using a
septamer-containing DNA competitor molecule (also called decoy DNA),
which permits experiments before the availability of antisense
molecules (Clusel et al., 1995 ; Morishita et al., 1998 ). These
studies suggested that septamer interactions are required for the
developmental expression of the tested neuronal- and glia-specific
genes and that septamers are likely positive regulators of
neurodifferentiation events. Two of the three markers tested in these
studies (ENK and NF68) are known to contain septamer motif (see Table
1). However, because of limited GenBank entrees, we could not confirm
the presence of the septamer element on the GFAP gene.
Progenitors populating distinct brain primordia express the 16 kDa
p-sept that is homodimerized and forms the P-band as
observed by EMSA (Figs. 2A,C,
4A,B). Additional evidence for the association of
P-band with progenitors was provided by manipulating the
differentiation of progenitors in culture (Johe et al., 1996 ). When E16
striatal cultures were treated with bFGF for 6 d, progenitors
persisted, as indicated by P-band, nestin, and cycD2 mRNA expression.
None of these markers could be detected in age-equivalent striatum (E22) or in cultures without bFGF treatment. After withdrawal of bFGF,
cells differentiated into the astroglial fate (marked by G-band and
GFAP mRNA), in agreement with previous studies showing that the default
differentiation pathway is astroglial (Craig et al., 1996 ; Johe et al.,
1996 ). During early postnatal age the P-band was also detected in the
cerebellum (Bayer and Altman, 1995 ). Because postnatal neurogenesis in
the cerebellum gives rise to granule cells, this may explain the
presence of the P-band in this period. The N-band was missing at these
times; that, however, would not be the first molecular difference
between granule cells of the cerebellum and other brain regions
(Osborne et al., 1993 ; Salinas et al., 1994 ; Dahlstrand et al.,
1995 ).
In the adult brain, the P-band was detected only in the hippocampus and
olfactory bulb (Fig. 2A,D). This finding agrees with previous descriptions of neural progenitor cell populations in these
regions of the adult mammalian CNS (Calof, 1995 ; McKay, 1997 ;
Gage, 1998 ; Luskin, 1998 ). The adult subventricular zone was not
examined because of the limited amounts of tissue available.
The appearance and disappearance of the P-, N-, and G-bands were
closely correlated with the known developmental gradient of
neurogenesis and gliogenesis and differentiation in ontogenetically distinct brain regions (Jacobson, 1993 ; Bayer and Altman, 1995 ; Fig.
2A). For example, both N- and G-bands appeared first
in the medulla oblongata (E13-E14) and were not detectable
postnatally, indicating the early cessation of neurogenesis and
gliogenesis and differentiation in this part of the CNS. Further
evidence documenting the association of N- and G-bands with
differentiating neurons and glia was obtained by blocking cellular
proliferation in embryonic forebrain cultures. Neurons and glia in the
mammalian CNS are generated at different time points of development.
Accordingly, in the E16 rat forebrain the majorityof neurons are
already postmitotic, but gliogenesis and differen-tiation are just on
the rise (Jacobson, 1993 ; Bayer and Altman, 1995 ). A mitotic blocker
applied at developmental age E16 consequently did not have a major
effect on the abundance of N-band and the corresponding NF68 mRNA
expression but substantially blocked gliogenesis, as measured by a drop
in the abundance of G-band and GFAP mRNA. The incomplete elimination of
the G-band and GFAP mRNA can be explained by the fact that some
progenitors had already differentiated into glia before antimitotic
treatment. Positive association of the G-band with glia was
demonstrated by analyzing primary cultures of cortical astrocytes, in
which only the G-band and GFAP mRNA were present (Fig.
2E). G-band was also detected in the nuclear extracts
of primary cultured oligodendrocytes (data not shown).
By using a novel combination of UV cross-linking (Tang et al., 1997 )
and chemical cross-linking (Korn et al., 1972 ), we found that all three
septamer complexes (P-, N-, and G-bands) share an identical DNA-binding
unit. This unit is formed by the homodimerized p-sept (Fig.
4A,B). However, the available data are insufficient to determine whether homodimerization of p-sept is a
prerequisite for DNA binding. As cross-linking studies demonstrated,
p-sept continued to be expressed in differentiating neuronal
and glial cells. These studies also demonstrated that differentiating
neurons express a 29 kDa protein (n-sept), whereas glia
express a 23 kDa protein (g-sept). Binding of the 29 kDa n-sept to the p-sept homodimer resulted in
the formation of a 62 kDa neuron-specific multimer observed as N-band.
Likewise, binding of the 23 kDa g-sept to the homodimerized
p-sept resulted in the formation of the glia-specific multimer of 56 kDa observed as G-band (Fig. 5).
Sept-binding proteins may exert their regulatory effects through
altering DNA structure (Spana and Corces, 1990 ). For example, the
binding of the N complex to its DNA site resulted in DNA bending of
90° (Fig. 5A,B). This can be permissive for far-distant
protein-DNA interactions (Tjian, 1996 ). These interactions are
critical in cellular differentiation as demonstrated in various
cells (Grosschedl et al., 1994 ; Perez et al., 1994 ; Armstrong et al.,
1995 ; Dyer et al., 1996 ). The significantly lesser degree of DNA
bending (72°) caused by the G complex creates a different structural
environment for far-distant DNA-protein interactions. This could be
less permissive for far-distant interactions.
We envisage the role of the various septamer-binding proteins in
regulating the expression of septamer motif-bearing genes (Table 1) as
similar to the regulation of Ig gene expression in the B-cell lineage.
The B-cell-specific coactivator OCA-B/OBF-1/BOB-1 is
expressed in differentiating B-cells and binds to the Oct-1 protein that directly binds to the octamer motif (Luo et al., 1992 ;
Wirth et al., 1995 ; Cepek et al., 1996 ; Kim et al., 1996 ; Knoepfel et
al., 1996 ; Matthias 1998 ). As suggested by the inactivation of the
OCA-B/OBF-1/BOB-1 gene, a precise, lineage-specific assembly of octamer-binding protein complexes is critical in regulating cell-specific expression of Ig genes (Nielsen et al., 1996 ; Schubart et
al., 1996 ). Similarly, the p-sept-positive multipotent
neuroepithelial progenitor cells will differentiate into either the
neuronal or the glial fate depending on the expression of either the
n-sept or the g-sept proteins. By
analogy to OCA-B/OBF-1/BOB-1, septamer-binding proteins
could contribute to the coordinated expression of septamer motif-bearing genes required to regulate the emergence of cellular diversity in the developing nervous system.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received July 28, 1999; revised Nov. 16, 1999; accepted Nov. 19, 1999.
This research was supported by Defense and Veterans Head Injury
Program Grant 0996-92N-6285 and National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Grant Z01 HD 00712-03. We thank L. Holtzlaw for the astrocytic cultures, Dr. T. Hazel for providing the
striatal progenitor cultures, and Dr. L. Hudson for critical discussions.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Denes v. Agoston, Department
of Anatomy and Cell Biology and Program in Neuroscience, School of
Medicine, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences,
B2036, Bethesda, MD 20814. E-mail: vagoston{at}helix.nih.gov.
 |
REFERENCES |
-
Agoston Dv,
Eiden LE,
Brenneman DE
(1991)
Calcium-dependent regulation of the enkephalin phenotype by neuronal activity during early ontogeny.
J Neurosci Res
28:140-148[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Agoston Dv,
Santha E,
Shieh G,
Lala R,
Dobi A
(1998)
Isolation and structural and genetic analysis of the mouse enkephalin gene and its (AC/TG)n repeats.
DNA Seq
9:217-226[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Armstrong RC,
Kim JG,
Hudson LD
(1995)
Expression of myelin transcription factor I (MyTI), a "zinc-finger" DNA-binding protein, in developing oligodendrocytes.
Glia
14:303-321[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Bayer SA,
Altman J
(1995)
In: Neurogenesis and neuronal migration. San Diego: Academic.
-
Boussif O,
Lezoualc'h F,
Zanta MA,
Mergny MD,
Scherman D,
Demeneix B,
Behr JP
(1995)
A versatile vector for gene and oligonucleotide transfer into cells in culture and in vivo: polyethylenimine.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
92:7297-7301[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Brenneman DE,
Neale EA,
Foster GA,
d'Autremont SW,
Westbrook GL
(1987)
Nonneuronal cells mediate neurotrophic action of vasoactive intestinal peptide.
J Cell Biol
104:1603-1610[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Brustle O,
McKay RD
(1996)
Neuronal progenitors as tools for cell replacement in the nervous system.
Curr Opin Neurobiol
6:688-695[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Calof AL
(1995)
Intrinsic and extrinsic factors regulating vertebrate neurogenesis.
Curr Opin Neurobiol
5:19-27[Medline].
-
Cepek KL,
Chasman DI,
Sharp PA
(1996)
Sequence-specific DNA binding of the B-cell-specific coactivator OCA-B.
Genes Dev
10:2079-2088[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Clusel C,
Meguenni S,
Elias I,
Vasseur M,
Blumenfeld M
(1995)
Inhibition of HSV-1 proliferation by decoy phosphodiester oligonucleotides containing ICP4 recognition sequences.
Gene Expr
4:301-309[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Craig CG,
Tropepe V,
Morshead CM,
Reynolds BA,
Weiss S,
van der Kooy D
(1996)
In vivo growth factor expansion of endogenous subependymal neural precursor cell populations in the adult mouse brain.
J Neurosci
16:2649-2658[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Dahlstrand J,
Lardelli M,
Lendahl U
(1995)
Nestin mRNA expression correlates with the central nervous system progenitor cell state in many, but not all, regions of developing central nervous system.
Dev Brain Res
84:109-129[Medline].
-
Dobi AL,
Palkovits M,
Palkovits CG,
Santha E,
Agoston Dv
(1995a)
Protein-DNA interactions during phenotypic differentiation.
Mol Neurobiol
10:185-203[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Dobi A,
Dameron CT,
Hu S,
Hamer D,
Winge DR
(1995b)
Distinct regions of Cu(I).ACE1 contact two spatially resolved DNA major groove sites.
J Biol Chem
270:10171-10178[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Dobi A,
Palkovits M,
Ring MA,
Eitel A,
Palkovits CG,
Lim F,
Agoston Dv
(1997)
Sample and probe: a novel approach for identifying development-specific cis-elements of the enkephalin gene.
Mol Brain Res
52:98-111[Medline].
-
Durkin RC,
Weisinger G,
Holloway MP,
La Gamma E
(1992)
Primary sequence of
1436 to +53 bp of the rat preproenkephalin gene putative Z-DNA and regulatory motifs.
Biochim Biophys Acta
1131:349-351[Medline]. -
Dyer MA,
Naidoo R,
Hayes RJ,
Larson CJ,
Verdine GL,
Baron MH
(1996)
A DNA-bending protein interacts with an essential upstream regulatory element of the human embryonic beta-like globin gene.
Mol Cell Biol
16:829-838[Abstract].
-
Eraly SA,
Nelson SB,
Huang KM,
Mellon PL
(1998)
Oct-1 binds promoter elements required for transcription of the GnRH gene.
Mol Endocrinol
12:469-481[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Freeman RS,
Estus S,
Johnson Jr EM
(1994)
Analysis of cell cycle-related gene expression in postmitotic neurons: selective induction of Cyclin D1 during programmed cell death.
Neuron
12:343-355[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Gage FH
(1998)
Cell therapy.
Nature
392:18-24[Medline].
-
Grosschedl R,
Giese K,
Pagel J
(1994)
HMG domain proteins: architectural elements in the assembly of nucleoprotein structures.
Trends Genet
10:94-100[Web of Science][Medline].
-
He X,
Rosenfeld MG
(1991)
Mechanisms of complex transcriptional regulation: implications for brain development.
Neuron
7:183-196[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Jacobson M
(1993)
In: Developmental neurobiology, Ed 3. New York: Plenum.
-
Johe KK,
Hazel TG,
Muller T,
Dugich DM,
McKay RD
(1996)
Single factors direct the differentiation of stem cells from the fetal and adult central nervous system.
Genes Dev
10:3129-3140[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Joshi J,
Sabol SL
(1991)
Proenkephalin gene expression in C6 rat glioma cells: potentiation of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate-dependent transcription by glucocorticoids.
Mol Endocrinol
5:1069-1080[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Kim J,
Zwieb C,
Wu C,
Adhya S
(1989)
Bending of DNA by gene-regulatory proteins: construction and use of a DNA bending vector.
Gene
85:15-23[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Kim J,
Jones BW,
Zock C,
Chen Z,
Wang H,
Goodman CS,
Anderson DJ
(1998)
Isolation and characterization of mammalian homologs of the Drosophila gene glial cells missing.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
95:12364-12369[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Kim U,
Qin XF,
Gong S,
Stevens S,
Luo Y,
Nussenzweig M,
Roeder RG
(1996)
The B-cell-specific transcription coactivator OCA-B/OBF-1/Bob-1 is essential for normal production of immunoglobulin isotypes.
Nature
383:542-547[Medline].
-
Knoepfel L,
Georgiev O,
Nielsen P,
Schaffner W
(1996)
Cloning and characterization of the murine B-cell specific transcriptional coactivator Bob1.
Biol Chem Hoppe Seyler
377:139-145[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Konig M,
Zimmer AM,
Steiner H,
Holmes PV,
Crawley JN,
Brownstein MJ,
Zimmer A
(1996)
Pain responses, anxiety and aggression in mice deficient in pre- proenkephalin.
Nature
383:535-538[Medline].
-
Korn AH,
Feairheller SH,
Filachione EM
(1972)
Glutaraldehyde: nature of the reagent.
J Mol Biol
65:525-529[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Lemke G
(1993)
Transcriptional regulation of the development of neurons and glia.
Curr Opin Neurobiol
3:703-708[Medline].
-
Lillien L
(1998)
Neural progenitors and stem cells: mechanisms of progenitor heterogeneity.
Curr Opin Neurobiol
8:37-44[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Luo Y,
Fujii H,
Gerster T,
Roeder RG
(1992)
A novel B cell-derived coactivator potentiates the activation of immunoglobulin promoters by octamer-binding transcription factors.
Cell
71:231-241[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Luskin MB
(1998)
Neuroblasts of the postnatal mammalian forebrain: their phenotype and fate.
J Neurobiol
36:221-233[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Martin LJ,
Spicer DM,
Lewis MH,
Gluck JP,
Cork LC
(1991)
Social deprivation of infant rhesus monkeys alters the chemoarchitecture of the brain: I. Subcortical regions.
J Neurosci
11:3344-3358[Abstract].
-
Matthias P
(1998)
Lymphoid-specific transcription mediated by the conserved octamer site: who is doing what?
Semin Immunol
10:155-163[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Maxam AM,
Gilbert W
(1977)
A new method for sequencing DNA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
74:560-564[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
McCarthy KD,
de Vellis J
(1980)
Preparation of separate astroglial and oligodendroglial cell cultures from rat cerebral tissue.
J Cell Biol
85:890-902[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
McKay R
(1997)
Stem cells in the central nervous system.
Science
276:66-71[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Morishita R,
Higaki J,
Tomita N,
Ogihara T
(1998)
Application of transcription factor "decoy" strategy as means of gene therapy and study of gene expression in cardiovascular disease.
Circ Res
82:1023-1028[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Nielsen PJ,
Georgiev O,
Lorenz B,
Schaffner W
(1996)
B lymphocytes are impaired in mice lacking the transcriptional co-activator Bob1/OCA-B/OBF1.
Eur J Immunol
26:3214-3218[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Osborne JG,
Kindy MS,
Spruce BA,
Hauser KF
(1993)
Ontogeny of proenkephalin mRNA and enkephalin peptide expression in the cerebellar cortex of the rat: spatial and temporal patterns of expression follow maturational gradients in the external granular layer and in Purkinje cells.
Dev Brain Res
76:1-12.
-
Perez MJ,
Rojo F, de LV
(1994)
Promoters responsive to DNA bending: a common theme in prokaryotic gene expression.
Microbiol Rev
58:268-290[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Pincus DW,
Goodman RR,
Fraser RA,
Nedergaard M,
Goldman SA
(1998)
Neural stem and progenitor cells: a strategy for gene therapy and brain repair.
Neurosurgery
42:858-867[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Rosen H,
Douglass J,
Herbert E
(1984)
Isolation and characterization of the rat proenkephalin gene.
J Biol Chem
259:14309-14313[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Rosenfeld MG
(1991)
POU-domain transcription factors: pou-er-ful developmental regulators.
Genes Dev
5:897-907[Free Full Text].
-
Rubenstein JL,
Beachy PA
(1998)
Patterning of the embryonic forebrain.
Curr Opin Neurobiol
8:18-26[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Ryoo HD,
Mann RS
(1999)
The control of trunk hox specificity and activity by extradenticle.
Genes Dev
13:1704-1716[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Saade NE,
Atweh SF,
Bahuth NB,
Jabbur SJ
(1997)
Augmentation of nociceptive reflexes and chronic deafferentation pain by chemical lesions of either dopaminergic terminals or midbrain dopaminergic neurons.
Brain Res
751:1-12[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Salinas PC,
Fletcher C,
Copeland NG,
Jenkins NA,
Nusse R
(1994)
Maintenance of Wnt-3 expression in Purkinje cells of the mouse cere- bellum depends on interactions with granule cells.
Development
120:1277-1286[Abstract].
-
Schubart DB,
Rolink A,
Kosco VM,
Botteri F,
Matthias P
(1996)
B-cell-specific coactivator OBF-1/OCA-B/Bob1 required for immune response and germinal centre formation.
Nature
383:538-542[Medline].
-
Spana C,
Corces VG
(1990)
DNA bending is a determinant of binding specificity for a Drosophila zinc finger protein.
Genes Dev
4:1505-1515[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Swanson HI,
Yang JH
(1999)
Specificity of DNA binding of the c-Myc/Max and ARNT/ARNT dimers at the CACGTG recognition site.
Nucleic Acids Res
27:3205-3212[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Tang H,
Xu Y,
Wong SF
(1997)
Identification and purification of cellular proteins that specifically interact with the RNA constitutive transport elements from retrovirus D.
Virology
228:333-339[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Tjian R
(1996)
The biochemistry of transcription in eukaryotes: a paradigm for multisubunit regulatory complexes.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
351:491-499[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Verrijzer CP,
Van der Vliet PC
(1993)
POU domain transcription factors.
Biochim Biophys Acta
1173:1-21[Medline].
-
Wegner M,
Drolet DW,
Rosenfeld MG
(1993)
POU-domain proteins: structure and function of developmental regulators.
Curr Opin Cell Biol
5:488-498[Medline].
-
Wirth T,
Pfisterer P,
Annweiler A,
Zwilling S,
Konig H
(1995)
Molecular principles of Oct2-mediated gene activation in B cells.
Immunobiology
193:161-170[Web of Science][Medline].
-
Yamashita J,
Yoshimasa T,
Arai H,
Hiraoka J,
Takaya K,
Miyamoto Y,
Ogawa Y,
Itoh H,
Nakao K
(1998)
Identification of cis-elements of the human endothelin-A receptor gene and inhibition of the gene expression by the decoy strategy.
J Biol Chem
273:15993-15999[Abstract/Free Full Text].
Copyright © 2000 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/00/2031073-12$05.00/0
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
A. Dobi, M. Szemes, C. Lee, M. Palkovits, F. Lim, A. Gyorgy, M. A. Mahan, and D. V. Agoston
AUF1 Is Expressed in the Developing Brain, Binds to AT-rich Double-stranded DNA, and Regulates Enkephalin Gene Expression
J. Biol. Chem.,
September 29, 2006;
281(39):
28889 - 28900.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|
|