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Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 2001, 21(1):18-26
Nerve Growth Factor, But Not Epidermal Growth Factor, Increases
Fra-2 Expression and Alters Fra-2/JunD Binding to AP-1 and CREB
Binding Elements in Pheochromocytoma (PC12) Cells
Valerie
Boss1,
John D.
Roback2,
Andrew N.
Young2,
Linda J.
Roback2,
Daniela M. Vogt
Weisenhorn2,
Rafael
Medina-Flores2, and
Bruce H.
Wainer2
Departments of 1 Pharmacology and
2 Pathology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta,
Georgia 30329
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ABSTRACT |
In pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells nerve growth factor (NGF) and
epidermal growth factor (EGF) activate similar receptor tyrosine kinase
signaling pathways but evoke strikingly different biological outcomes:
NGF induces differentiation and EGF acts as a mitogen. A novel approach
was developed for identifying transcription factor activities
associated with NGF-activated, but not EGF-activated, signaling, using
random oligonucleotide clones from a DNA recognition library to isolate
specific DNA binding proteins from PC12 nuclear extracts. A protein
complex from NGF-treated, but not EGF-treated, cells was identified
that exhibits increased mobility and DNA binding activity in gel
mobility shift assays. The binding complex was identified in supershift
assays as Fra-2/JunD. The clones used as probes contain either AP-1 or
cAMP response element binding (CREB) recognition elements. Time course
experiments revealed further differences in NGF and EGF signaling in
PC12 cells. NGF elicits a more delayed and sustained ERK
phosphorylation than EGF, consistent with previous reports. Both growth
factors transiently induce c-fos, but NGF evokes a
greater response than EGF. NGF specifically increases Fra-1 and Fra-2
levels at 4 and 24 hr. The latter is represented in Western blots by
bands in the 40-46 kDa range. NGF, but not EGF, enhances the upper
bands, corresponding to phosphorylated Fra-2. These findings suggest
that prolonged alterations in Fra-2 and subsequent increases in
Fra-2/JunD binding to AP-1 and CREB response elements common among many
gene promoters could serve to trigger broadly an NGF-specific program
of gene expression.
Key words:
nerve growth factor; epidermal growth factor; differentiation; transcription factor; Fra-2; PC-12
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INTRODUCTION |
Growth factors are critical
mediators of cellular survival, proliferation, and differentiation. The
rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) cell line has been used extensively to
study both the biological outcomes induced by growth factors and their
associated intracellular signaling cascades. In these cells nerve
growth factor (NGF) triggers neuronal differentiation (Greene and
Tischler, 1976 ), but epidermal growth factor (EGF) elicits a
proliferative response (for review, see Wells, 1999 ). Both NGF and EGF
activate receptor tyrosine kinases, resulting in receptor
autophosphorylation as well as phosphorylation of a targeted pool of
downstream molecules exhibiting Src homology 2 (SH2) domains. The SH2
domain-containing molecules recruited by the EGF and NGF receptors are
virtually identical. They include Shc and Grb2, which trigger the well
known Ras/Raf/MAP kinase pathway, as well as phosphoinositide-3 kinase
(PI-3 kinase) and phospholipase C3 (PLC ), which activate
additional signaling cascades (for review, see Chao, 1992 ; Greene and
Kaplan, 1995 ; Marshall, 1995 ; Whitmarsh and Davis, 1996 ; Wells, 1999 ).
Given the close similarities in early signaling events initiated by NGF
and EGF, the question arises as to how they induce such different biological programs in the same cells.
Much research in this area has focused on identifying early points of
divergence in the EGF and NGF signaling pathways (for review, see
Marshall, 1995 ). NGF produces a more prolonged pattern of tyrosine
phosphorylation of PLC and PI-3 kinase-associated proteins
(Blumberg et al., 1995 ) and a more sustained activation of MAP kinase
(also known as extracellular-related kinase; ERK) (Qiu and Green, 1992 ;
Nguyen et al., 1993 ) than does EGF. Sustained ERK activation is
sufficient for neuritogenesis in PC12 cells (Traverse et al., 1994 ;
Fukuda et al., 1995 ; Yamada et al., 1996 ). Sustained, but not
transient, activation of ERK permits its translocation to the nucleus
(Chen et al., 1992 ; Nguyen et al., 1993 ; Traverse et al., 1994 ), where
it may modulate gene expression via the phosphorylation of
transcription factors.
The present study was designed to detect downstream changes
in transcription factor binding activity associated with NGF, but not
EGF, signaling. The experimental approach is based on studies in which
single transcription factors, such as MyoD, were incubated with random
oligonucleotides to identify consensus DNA recognition elements
(Blackwell and Weintraub, 1990 ; Sun and Baltimore, 1991 ; Gogos et al.,
1992 ). In the present experiments complex nuclear extracts were used in
place of single purified transcription factors. Random oligonucleotides
were cloned into a DNA recognition element library (DREL); then
individual clones were used to probe nuclear extracts from NGF- versus
EGF-treated PC12 cells and identify NGF-specific protein-DNA binding
interactions. This strategy revealed that NGF, but not EGF, mediates a
long-term increase in the binding of an AP-1 complex composed of Fra-2
and JunD to both AP-1 and cAMP response element binding (CREB)
consensus sites. Such elements are found in a wide variety of gene
promoters, and long-lasting differences in AP-1 activity could
facilitate a divergence between the differentiative response evoked by
NGF and the mitogenic response induced by EGF.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell culture and nuclear extraction
PC12 cells were a gift from Dr. H. C. Palfrey (University
of Chicago, IL), subcloned from a parental PC12 line (Dr. Eric Shooter, Stanford University, CA) for maximal neuritogenesis in response to NGF.
Cells were grown on plain or collagen-coated plates in DMEM with 10%
fetal bovine serum, 200 mM glutamine, and 50 U/ml penicillin-50 µg/ml streptomycin (Complete medium). Cells either were untreated or were incubated in the presence of 2.5S NGF (50-100 ng/ml; Alomone Labs, Jerusalem, Israel) or 30-50 ng/ml EGF (Promega, Madison, WI) for various times as listed below. Nuclear extracts from
PC12 cells were prepared in early experiments via a modification (Abmayr and Workman, 1989 ) of the protocol of Dignam et al. (1983) . In
later experiments a different protocol based on the method of Shapiro
et al. (1988) was used because of its higher yield. In this procedure
growth factor-treated or untreated cells from four 150 mm plates at
40-70% confluence were rinsed quickly with room temperature
PBS, scraped into 10 ml/plate of ice-cold PBS, pooled, and
pelleted at 2000 × g in a 4°C centrifuge. Pellets were resuspended in 5× packed cell volume (PCV) of hypotonic buffer [containing (in mM) 10 HEPES-KOH, pH 7.9, 10 KCl, 0.75 spermidine, 0.15 spermine, 0.1 EDTA, 0.1 EGTA, 1.0 dithiothreitol, and 0.2 PMSF plus 1 complete mini-protease inhibitor
tablet (Roche, Indianapolis, IN) per 10 ml] and swelled on ice for 10 min. Cells were spun at 2000 × g for 10 min, and the
pellet was resuspended in 1× PCV of hypotonic buffer to which was
added 0.05% IPEGAL (Sigma, St. Louis, MO). The cells were lysed in a 2 ml Dounce homogenizer. The homogenate was transferred to a centrifuge
tube to which was added 0.1× vol of Sucrose Restore Buffer
[containing (in mM) 50 HEPES-KOH, pH 7.9, 10 KCl, 0.75 spermidine, 0.15 spermine, 0.2 EDTA, and 1 dithiothreitol
plus 67.5% sucrose and protease inhibitors as above]. The homogenate
was spun at 10,000 rpm at 4°C in a Beckman JA20 rotor for 1 min with
brake. The nuclear pellet was resuspended in (in
mM) 10 HEPES-KOH, pH 7.9, 0.75 spermidine, 0.15 spermine, 0.2 EDTA, 2 EGTA, and 2 dithiothreitol plus 25% glycerol,
10% (v/v) saturated ammonium sulfate, and protease inhibitors as
above. This resuspension was rocked for 30 min on ice and spun at
150,000 × g in a Ti70.1 rotor for 90 min. Solid
ammonium sulfate (0.33 gm/ml) was added gradually to the supernatant as
it was rocked at 4°C over a period of 30 min; then the murky
precipitate was allowed to continue rocking for 20 min. After
centrifugation at 150,000 × g in at Ti70.1 rotor at
4°C, the pellet was resuspended in 400-600 µl of dialysis buffer
[containing (in mM) 20 HEPES-KOH, pH 7.9, 100 KCl, 0.2 EDTA, 0.2 EGTA, 2 dithiothreitol, and 0.2 PMSF plus 20%
glycerol] and then dialyzed for several hours or overnight against 200 vol of dialysis buffer. Then the nuclear extract was aliquotted,
rapidly frozen, and stored at 80°C.
Production of a DNA recognition element library (DREL)
A plasmid DREL was designed to screen nuclear extracts from PC12
cells for putative transcription factors that exhibit growth factor-specific binding to cloned DNA inserts (see Fig. 1 for schematic). Nuclear extracts from control and NGF-treated PC12 cells
were incubated with a pool of radiolabeled double-stranded oligonucleotides consisting of a central random core sequence 25 bp in
length, with defined 20 bp flanking regions. The extracts were
fractionated by electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA), and the
bound oligonucleotides were isolated and amplified by PCR. Selected
oligonucleotides were used in successive rounds of PCR amplification.
The amplified pool was cloned into pBluescript to produce a DREL.
Individual oligonucleotide clones from the DREL were screened by EMSA
for differences in gel shift patterns by using nuclear extracts from
control, NGF-, and EGF-treated PC12. This protocol is described in
detail below.
Production of 65 bp EMSA probes. The oligonucleotide probe
mixture (R65) was created as a population of radiolabeled
double-stranded oligonucleotides with two defined 20 bp flanking
sequences and a 25 bp random core sequence. The upper strand was
prepared by programming the specific sequence for the first and last 20 bases and by permitting the oligonucleotide synthesizer to inject all four deoxynucleotides into the reaction column simultaneously for 25 consecutive cycles for the intervening random sequence. The upper
strand for R65 is shown below, with the random core sequence designated
as N25. A second oligonucleotide (bR2), with covalently attached biotin
moiety, was used in forming complementary strands. These and all
oligonucleotides were gel-purified before use.
(XhoI) R65:
(5')-ATACTACCTCGAGAACGTCC-N25-GGACTCA-GAATTCCAGACTC-(3')
bR2: CCTGAGTCTTAAGGTCTGAG-biotin-(5')
(EcoRI)
The pool of R65 oligonucleotides was 5'-end labeled with T4
polynucleotide kinase and 32P- ATP.
Complementary strands were formed by annealing the 5'-biotinylated bR2
oligonucleotide to R65, followed by extension with the Klenow fragment
of DNA polymerase I in the presence of all four deoxynucleotides triphosphates. As described below, the biotin tag was used for purification of the R65 oligonucleotides before PCR, and the
32P-tag was used to monitor the probe in
EMSAs and to track recovery during purification.
EMSA selection and PCR amplification. Nuclear extracts from
control and NGF-treated PC12 cells were bound to the R65 probes via the
following reaction mixture: 4 µg of nuclear extract, 1 µg of poly
(dI/dC):poly (dI/dC), 15% glycerol, and (in mM) 4 HEPES-NaOH, pH 7.9, 10 Tris-HCl, pH 7.9, 50-150 KCl, 1 EDTA, 1 dithiothreitol, and 0.2 PMSF in a final volume of 20 µl. The reaction
proceeded for 30 min at 37°C. In the first round of screening 100 ng
of the initial radiolabeled double-stranded R65 oligonucleotide pool was added; in subsequent rounds the input oligonucleotide probes were
derived by PCR amplification (see below). After a 20 min binding
reaction at 30°C the samples were electrophoresed with a 4%
Tris-glycine gel (4% acrylamide, 0.05% bis-acrylamide, 2.5% glycerol, 50 mM Tris base, 380 mM glycine, and
2 mM EDTA). The autoradiogram derived from the gel was used
to identify and excise the appropriate lanes. For both NGF and control
extracts there were three lanes representing binding reactions
containing 50, 100, and 150 mM KCl, respectively. Each
lane, excluding the lower regions containing unbound probe, was divided
into three to six segments, which were electroeluted at 200 V for 2 hr.
Using gel segments, as opposed to a single gel slab containing all of
the "bound" oligonucleotides, resulted in higher yields of
oligonucleotides after elution and concentration as described below as
well as a greater efficiency for the subsequent PCR reactions. Tracking of the radiolabel indicated yields of 90-95%.
To remove PCR inhibitors, we concentrated the R65
oligonucleotide subpool from each gel segment in 0.5× SSC, using a
centrifugal concentrator (Amicon, Beverly, MA), and then incubated it
for 45 min with streptavidin-paramagnetic particles (SA-SMP; Promega) to form R65-SA-SMP complexes. The complexes were constrained
magnetically and washed with 0.5× SSC and then treated with 200 mM NaOH at 60°C to release the radiolabeled single R65
strand from the remainder of the complex. The radiolabeled strand was
neutralized with 3 M sodium acetate, pH 7, and then
transferred to a centrifugal concentrator to reduce the volume and
change the diluent to H2O. The final yield of
each selected single-stranded radiolabeled R65 oligonucleotide subpool
was >80%.
The population of oligonucleotides isolated from each gel segment was
amplified in a separate PCR reaction. The forward primer R1 was
identical to the first 20 bases of the upper strand of R65 and was
5'-radiolabeled as described above. The biotinylated oligonucleotide
bR2 (see above) was used as the reverse primer. Each reaction contained
5 µl of purified R65 eluate; 50 pmol of each primer; 200 µM each of dATP, dCTP, dGTP, and dTTP; 1.25 U of
Pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA); and 5 µl of Pfu 10× buffer in a final reaction volume of 50 µl. The
entire volume of each eluted R65 subpool was amplified. Amplification conditions were 95°C for a single 2 min cycle; then 95°C for 30 sec, followed by 60°C for 30 sec for 10 cycles; and finally 60°C for a single 7 min cycle. The total number of cycles was kept low to
prevent preferential amplification of individual clones. After
amplification the reaction volumes for all PCR reactions were combined
to include oligonucleotides selected by both NGF-treated and control
extracts. They were quantified spectrophotometrically and divided into
100 ng aliquots. These combined oligonucleotide subpools were used as
probes for subsequent rounds of EMSA selection. After the fourth round
of binding, selection, amplification, and combination, the enriched
oligonucleotide populations were ligated into pBluescript (Stratagene).
Cloning of selected R65 oligonucleotides and screening of the
DREL by EMSA. Each enriched oligonucleotide population was
digested with EcoRI and XhoI, ligated into an
EcoRI/XhoI double-digested pBluescript plasmid,
and maintained in Escherichia coli XL1-Blue (Stratagene).
Plasmids were prepared from single colonies, and the inserts were
sequenced by dideoxy chain termination, using a commercial kit and
protocol (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL). To PCR-amplify individual
cloned R65 inserts from pBlueScript, we designed two primers: pBS.UP:
(5')-GGAACAAAAGCTGGGTACC-(3') and pBS.DOWN:
(5')-CTGCAG-GAATTCTGAGTCC-(3').
EMSA probes were prepared from the individual clones by using the
following reaction mixture: 10 µg of purified plasmid DNA; 50 pmol
each of the primers pBS.UP and pBS.DOWN; 10 µCi of
32P-dCTP (Amersham); 200 µM
each of dATP, dCTP, dGTP, and dTTP; 5 µl of Pfu 10×
buffer; and 1.25 µl of Pfu DNA polymerase. Amplification conditions were 95°C for a single 30 sec cycle; followed by 95°C for 30 sec, 55°C for 30 sec, and 72°C for 30 sec for 20 cycles; followed by 72°C for a single 3 min cycle. Probes were screened by
EMSA for growth factor-specific DNA binding proteins in extracts from
the nuclei of control, NGF-, and EGF-treated PC12 cells.
Analysis of selected oligonucleotides
Individual R65 clones were identified that showed reproducibly
different gel shift patterns for NGF- versus EGF-treated PC12 cells. To
characterize two of these clones further, we used shorter versions (35 bp) of the A9 clone (A9WT) and the C35 probe (C35WT), which contained
the respective N25 core sequences. In addition, five oligonucleotides
designated A9m1-A9m5, generated by mutating sequential 5 bp sites in
the A9WT probe, were used in EMSAs as competitors for the labeled A9WT
probe. Oligonucleotides for these experiments were purchased from
Operon Technologies (Alameda, CA). For EMSAs that used the shorter
probes, the polyacrylamide concentration was increased to 6%; the
binding reaction was optimized for each probe by adding salmon sperm
DNA (1 µg per binding reaction) and varying the concentration of poly
(dI/dC):poly (dI/dC).
EMSA supershift assays were performed as described above, except that
nuclear extracts were preincubated with 2 µl of water (control) or
antibody for 10 min at room temperature; then probe was added for
the binding reaction (37°C for 30 min). All antibodies were purchased
from Santa Cruz Biotechnology (Santa Cruz, CA), except for the antibody
recognizing CREB, which was a gift from Dr. Jeremy Boss (Emory
University, Atlanta, GA).
Western blot analysis of nuclear extracts and
whole-cell extracts
Nuclear extracts were prepared as described above for EMSA.
Protein concentrations were determined by a kit from Bio-Rad (Richmond, CA). Nuclear proteins (10-20 µg/lane) were diluted with
H20 to a volume of 10 µl and then denatured in
an equal volume of 2× loading buffer [2× solution = 0.128 M Tris, pH 6.8, 2% SDS, 20% (v/v) glycerol, 0.02 mg/ml
bromophenol blue, 40 µl of 1% pyronin Y, and 4% (v/v)
-mercaptoethanol] by heating to 95°C for 5 min. Equal amounts of
protein from control, EGF-, and NGF-treated PC12 cells were separated
by SDS-PAGE (18 × 16 cm gels) in which the upper stacking gel
contained 4% acrylamide and the lower resolving gel contained 10-12%
acrylamide (37.5:1:: acrylamide:bis ratio). Running buffer was
composed of 0.5 M Tris, 0.38 M glycine, and 0.1% SDS. The SDS-PAGE gel was run at 100 V for 30 min and then at 200 V for 2.5-3 hr. An immunoblot-PVDC membrane (Bio-Rad) was pretreated
with methanol for 15 sec and rinsed in Transfer buffer for 10-15 min.
For Western blot the proteins were transferred from the gel to the
treated membrane by electrophoresis for 1-2 hr at 200 V or overnight
at 40-50 V at 4°C. Transfer buffer contained 0.025 M
Tris and 0.192 M glycine. Membranes were rinsed with
Tris-buffered saline (TBS) several times, blocked with 3% milk/TBS,
and exposed to primary antibodies against Fra-2 or JunD (Santa Cruz
Biotechnology) diluted in block solution overnight at 4°C. The
membranes were rinsed with TBS containing 0.1% Tween-20, blocked with
3% milk/TBS, and exposed to a species-appropriate HRP-labeled
secondary antibody (Amersham/Pharmacia, Piscataway, NJ) diluted 1:1000
in block solution for 2 hr at room temperature. Then they were rinsed,
processed by using a chemiluminescence detection kit from DuPont/NEN,
and exposed to film.
A typical Western mini-blot protocol was used in the time course
experiments with whole-cell extracts prepared in RIPA-2 buffer with
protease inhibitors. The composition of buffers and gels was the same
as given above for the larger format gels, but the SDS-PAGE running
time was reduced to 1 hr. Blots were treated with antibodies and
processed as described above. This protocol included primary antibodies
specific for the following antigens: Fra-1 and Fra-2 (Santa Cruz
Biotechnology), c-fos (Oncogene, Cambridge, MA), and ERK and
phospho-ERK (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA).
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RESULTS |
A novel approach was developed for the identification of
transcription factors in PC12 cells that are associated with
NGF-activated, but not EGF-activated, signaling, using oligonucleotide
clones from a DREL as affinity tags to isolate specific DNA binding
proteins (Fig. 1). PC12 cells were
incubated for 1-3 d in the presence and absence of NGF (100 ng/ml).
Nuclear extracts prepared from these cells were incubated with a pool
of labeled double-stranded R65 oligonucleotides containing random 25 bp
core sequences. Oligonucleotide subpools that bound to the extracts
were selected by EMSA, amplified by PCR, and then combined for use as
the input oligonucleotide pool for a subsequent round of the procedure.
After four rounds of binding, selection, amplification, and
combination, the initially random oligonucleotide pools were enriched
for oligonucleotides containing sequences recognized by DNA binding
proteins in the PC12 nuclear extracts. The enriched heterogeneous
oligonucleotide population was cloned into pBluescript to form a DREL
consisting of ~3200 clones. DNA sequencing of 100 of these individual
clones revealed that their random core sequences were unique,
indicating that the library was not composed of merely a few highly
amplified clones. A few of the clones, such as C35 (see below),
contained core sequences of only 24 bp in length, probably owing to PCR error.

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Figure 1.
Oligonucleotide clones from a DNA recognition
element library (DREL) are used as probes to detect NGF-specific
changes in transcription factor binding activity. Nuclear extracts from
untreated control (C) PC12 cells or cells treated
for 48 hr with NGF (N) are incubated with
double-stranded 65 bp oligonucleotides that contain a randomized 25 bp
core. The extracts are fractionated by EMSA, and the oligonucleotides
bound to the nuclear proteins are isolated. The selected
oligonucleotides are amplified by PCR and then serve as input
oligonucleotides for another round of the procedure. After four rounds
the amplified oligonucleotide pools that bind to extracts from either
or both the control and NGF-treated cells are combined and cloned into
pBluescript, producing a DREL. Individual clones from the DREL are used
as probes in EMSAs to identify differential gel shift patterns when
incubated with nuclear extracts from control (C),
EGF-treated (E), and NGF-treated
(N) PC12 cells. At the bottom left
of the figure is a representative sample of the patterns observed in
EMSAs in the first four rounds of the protocol. Broad smears without
individual bands are observed because the oligonucleotide pool is
heterogeneous. The representative sample on the bottom
right shows an EMSA probed with a single clone isolated from
the DREL. Individual bands are visible, and in this example NGF
treatment elicits a different banding pattern
(arrowhead) from that observed with either no treatment
or EGF.
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Three of the 100 clones that were tested displayed similar gel shift
patterns that were reproducibly different for NGF- versus control or
EGF-treated cells. These clones were designated as A9, C9, and C35, and
their N25 core sequences are listed in Figure 2A. The proteins for
which the DNA binding activities were regulated by NGF were designated
as nerve growth factor-regulated DNA binding activities (NERDs). As the
gel shift patterns in Figure 2B illustrate, NGF, but
not EGF, upregulated binding and increased the mobility of nuclear
protein complexes binding to clones A9, C35, and C9 (NERDs 1, 2, and 3, respectively). In contrast, the majority of the tested clones did not
bind extracts differentially that were treated with either growth
factor, as clone C50 typifies (Fig. 2B). In addition,
two clones bound NERDs that apparently were downregulated by NGF as
compared with EGF (data not shown).

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Figure 2.
EGF- versus NGF-treated nuclear extracts produce
differential gel shift patterns when probed with individual
oligonucleotide clones isolated from the DREL. A, Core
sequences are listed for four of 100 individual DREL oligonucleotides
that were tested. B, Nerve growth factor-regulated DNA
binding activities (NERDs) are detected as differences in individual
gel shifts. The A9, C35, and C9 probes recognize complexes from PC12
nuclear extracts for which the binding activity is increased by 24-48
hr of treatment with NGF (N) as compared with EGF
(E) or control (C), denoted
as NERDs 1, 2, and 3 (see
respective arrowheads). For the majority of probes that
were tested, such as C50, nuclear extracts from control or growth
factor-treated extracts exhibited the same banding pattern, indicating
that proteins bound by the N25 core sequences were not regulated by EGF
or NGF.
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To facilitate the identification of NGF-upregulated NERDs and their
specific binding sites, we prepared 35 bp truncated versions (C35WT and
A9WT) of the respective C35 and A9 probes (full length = 65 bp)
containing the 25 bp core sequences. The truncated versions of these
probes generally elicited fewer bands on EMSAs than the full-length
probes (compare Figs. 2, 3). This
difference is attributable to nuclear proteins binding to the flanking
sequences of the full-length probes, because the core sequences are
identical. NGF elicited an increase in both the mobility and intensity
of the NERD band in EMSAs with either C35WT or A9WT probes. The
truncated oligonucleotides mutually competed for NERD binding (Fig. 3).
The A9, C9, and C35 long oligonucleotides also were able to compete
away NERD binding to either of the truncated probes (data not shown).
These data indicate that NERDs 1, 2, and 3 are the same entity
(referred to herein as NERD1). A9WT contains two known protein
recognition elements (Fig.
4A): a CREB-responsive
element (CRE; Comb et al., 1986 ; Delegeane et al., 1987 ) and an Ets
site (for review, see Wasylyk et al., 1993 ). To identify which of the
sites in A9WT is recognized by NERD1, we applied a series of five
mutant oligonucleotides, A9m1-A9m5, in excess as unlabeled competitors
to block interaction between the A9WT probe and nuclear extracts from
NGF-treated PC12 cells. As Figure 4B shows, the
NERD1/A9WT binding was disrupted by excess unlabeled A9WT as well as by
mutants A9m4 and A9m5. In contrast, mutants A9m1-A9m3 failed to
inhibit the A9WT-NERD1 interaction. These data indicate that the CRE
spanned by the A9m1-A9m3 mutants is necessary for NERD1 binding to the
A9WT probe. A search of the TRANSFAC database (Wingender et al., 2000 )
determined that C35WT contains an AP-1 consensus site, TGAGTCA (Angel
et al., 1987 ; Lee et al., 1987 ), but no other known recognition
elements, suggesting that NERD1 binds to AP-1 recognition sites as well as to CRE. The C9 core sequence also contains a CREB/AP-1-like binding
site, ACGTCA, identified by TRANSFAC search.

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Figure 3.
Truncated versions of the C35 and A9 probes,
designated C35WT and A9WT, mutually compete for NERD1 binding.
A, B, Both C35WT and A9WT demonstrate an increase in
mobility and intensity of the NERD1 band (arrow) in PC12
nuclear extracts treated for 24 hr with 100 ng/ml NGF
(N) as compared with 30 ng/ml EGF
(E) or no drug ( ). A, Binding of
NERD1 to the radiolabeled C35WT probe is competed by increasing
concentrations (2-100 ng) of unlabeled A9WT or C35WT.
B, Binding of NERD1 to the radiolabeled A9WT probe is
competed by increasing concentrations (2-100 ng) of A9WT or C35WT.
This figure is a representative example from five separate
experiments.
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Figure 4.
Mutational analysis demonstrates that NERD1 binds
to a consensus CREB site in the A9WT probe. This experiment is a
representative example of three independent EMSAs in which
(A) potential binding sites in the A9WT sequence
are mutated, and (B) the mutant probes are used
in 100- to 200-fold excess to compete for NERD1 binding
(arrowhead) from NGF-treated extracts
(N) probed with labeled A9WT. B,
A9WT, as well as A9m4 and A9m5 (which are mutated in the Ets binding
site), blocks binding of the A9WT probe. In contrast, A91, A9m2, and
A9m3 fail to compete for NERD1 binding, suggesting that the mutated
CREB site is crucial to NERD1 binding. Control extracts include no
treatment ( ) and EGF-treatment (E).
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NERD1 was identified in supershift assays as an AP-1 complex. EMSAs
were performed in the presence and absence of antibodies specific for
CREB or various members of the AP-1 family. Only antibodies recognizing
JunD and Fra-2 supershifted the NERD1 band in EMSAs with either C35WT
(Fig. 5A) or A9WT (Fig.
5B). These antibodies did not produce similar bands in EMSAs
in the absence of nuclear extracts (data not shown). Antibodies
specific for ATF-2 and CREB supershifted other complexes probed with
A9WT but had no effect on NERD1 (Fig. 5B). These data
indicate that NERD1 is composed of Fra-2 and JunD and concur with
previous evidence that AP-1 complexes bind to both CRE and AP-1 binding
elements (Sassone-Corsi et al., 1990 ). Western blots were performed to identify NGF-specific changes in expression or size of the Fra-2 or
JunD proteins. In agreement with previous reports, Fra-2 was represented by two or more bands ranging from 40-46 kDa, with the
larger bands representing phosphorylated forms of the protein (Yoshida
et al., 1991 ; Gruda et al., 1994 ; Suzuki et al., 1994 ). The exact
number of bands varied among experiments, although there was always a
faint band or smear at ~40 kDa and at least one other band at 43-46
kDa. NGF, but not EGF, markedly increased the size of the upper
band (Figs. 6A,
7E). In contrast, neither EGF
nor NGF induced changes in JunD (Fig. 6B).

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Figure 5.
NERD1 binding to C35WT and A9WT probes is
supershifted by antibodies that specifically recognize Fra-2 and JunD
in EMSAs. A, B, NERD1 binding for untreated PC12 cells
( ) or cells treated for 24 hr with 30 ng/ml EGF
(E) or 100 ng/ml NGF (N) is
supershifted by antibodies specific for Fra-2 and JunD, but not by
antibodies recognizing CREB, c-Jun, or other members of the AP-1
family. A, The C35WT probe detects a single strong band
in PC12 nuclear extracts (arrow), which is supershifted
partially by antibodies specifically recognizing Fra-2 or JunD.
B, The NERD1 band (arrow) also is
supershifted by Fra-2 and JunD antibodies when extracts are probed with
A9WT. CREB- and ATF-2-specific antibodies supershift other complexes
but have no effect on NERD1. This figure is representative of four
independent experiments.
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Figure 6.
NFG, but not EGF, increases the expression of
Fra-2 but has no effect on JunD in PC12 cells. A, An
antibody that specifically recognizes Fra-2 reveals a series of bands
in the 40-46 kDa range in Western blots of PC12 nuclear extracts. All
lanes were loaded with 10 µg of protein. NGF (N; 100 ng/ml, 24 hr) induces a large increase in the size of upper band(s),
producing a broad smear in the 43-46 kDa range. EGF (E;
30 ng/ml, 24 hr) has no effect on Fra-2 expression. B,
An antibody specific for JunD p39 recognizes a doublet in the 37-40
kDa range. Neither EGF (E) nor NGF
(N) affects expression of JunD in PC12 cells.
This figure is representative of three independent experiments.
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Figure 7.
A time course experiment illustrates the
differences in phospho-ERK and AP-1 proteins induced by EGF versus NGF
in PC12 cells. Western blots of whole-cell extracts were processed with
antibodies that specifically recognize phospho-ERK
(A), both phosphorylated and unphosphorylated ERK
(B), c-fos
(C), Fra-1 (D), and Fra-2
(E). Cells were untreated
(0) or were treated with EGF or NGF for 0.08-24
hr, as labeled in the figure. A, EGF elicits a very
rapid transient phospho-ERK response, whereas NGF elicits a rapid but
sustained response. B, Overall ERK expression is
unchanged by either EGF or NGF treatment. C, Both EGF
and NGF induce c-fos, with a maximal response occurring
at 1 hr. For both growth factors this effect is transient, but the NGF
response is more robust than that produced by EGF. D,
Fra-1 (arrow; the lower band at ~43 kDa) is induced by
NGF, but not by EGF, after a 4 hr delay and the response is sustained
at 24 hr. The upper bands do not correspond with the reported size for
Fra-1 and are nonspecific. E, NGF, but not EGF, induces
a large increase in the upper Fra-2 bands (43-46 kDa;
arrow) at 4 and 24 hr. Fra-2 is detectable as two to
three bands at 40-46 kDa in control, EGF-, and NGF-treated cells. All
lanes were loaded with 20 µg of protein. These data are
representative of three independent experiments. Inset
box (bottom right), EGF increased ERK
phosphorylation (p-MAPK), but not overall ERK (MAPK) expression, at 5 min over a concentration range of two log units but did not affect
Fra-2 expression at 4 hr at any dose. An example of the NGF-induced
Fra-2 response at 4 hr is included in the same blot for comparison. All
lanes were loaded with 10 µg of protein. This illustration is
representative of three independent experiments.
|
|
Time course experiments were performed to examine the relationship
between NGF and EGF receptor activation, the duration of the associated
ERK response, and the expression of AP-1 proteins in PC12 cells. As
Figure 7 illustrates, EGF elicited a very transient increase in
phosphorylated ERK (not detectable after 30 min) and a transient
increase in c-fos that reached a maximum at ~1 hr. EGF had
no effect on Fra-2 and did not induce Fra-1 expression. NGF elicited a
much longer increase in ERK phosphorylation (phospho-ERK was still
detectable at 4 hr) and a more robust c-fos response than
that induced by EGF, although the time course for the c-fos response was similar for both growth factors. In contrast to EGF, NGF
induced a delayed Fra-2 response after 4 hr. Delayed Fra-1 expression
also was induced by NGF. The possibility was tested that the high dose
of EGF used in these experiments was suboptimal for eliciting changes
in Fra-1 and Fra-2 responses (Greenberg et al., 1985 ). EGF consistently
induced rapid phosphorylation of ERK yet failed to increase Fra-1 (data
not shown) or Fra-2 expression across a wide concentration range (Fig.
7). Thus, NGF and EGF have markedly different effects on transcription
factor expression in PC12 cells, which directly correlate with the
differences in the duration of ERK phosphorylation.
 |
DISCUSSION |
This study used a novel experimental approach to identify a
long-term increase in DNA binding activity of a Fra-2/JunD AP-1 complex
associated with the differentiative growth factor NGF, but not with the
mitogenic factor EGF. AP-1 activity generally is associated with cell
proliferation and transformation (for review, see Angel and Karin,
1991 ). However, the effects of AP-1 on transcription are highly
dependent on the composition of the AP-1 complex (Suzuki et al., 1991 ).
AP-1 is a heterodimeric or homodimeric protein complex containing
products of the c-jun and c-fos proto-oncogene
family. Fos proteins include c-fos, FosB, FosB, Fra-1,
and Fra-2. The Jun family is composed of c-Jun and its homologs v-Jun,
JunB, and JunD. Members of the Fos and Jun family contain leucine
zipper motifs and can form heterodimers; the Jun family can
homodimerize also. In addition, these proteins can interact with
non-AP-1 proteins containing leucine zipper motifs (for review, see
Foletta, 1996 ). Although c-fos and c-Jun both are associated
strongly with cell proliferation induced by a variety of mitogens such
as serum, EGF, and other mitogenic growth factors, evidence suggests
that Fra-2 may be an important signaling component in development and
differentiation (for review, see Angel and Karin, 1991 ; Foletta, 1996 ).
For example, in myeloma cell lines, 8Br-cAMP triggers increased Fra-2
levels and concomitant enhancement of the DNA binding activity of a
Fra-2/JunD complex, together with cell cycle arrest (Rezzonico et al.,
1995 ). In osteoblasts, Fra-2 levels increase with differentiation, and
inhibition of Fra-2 function inhibits differentiation (McCabe et al.,
1996 ). Paradoxically, Fra-2 also has been implicated in cellular
transformation and proliferation in chick embryo fibroblasts (Nishina
et al., 1990 ; Foletta et al., 1994 ). However, Fra-2 is nontransforming in rodent fibroblasts. Evidence suggests that a C-terminal
transactivation domain that is present in some members of the AP-1
family, but not Fra-2, is required for transformation in rodent cells,
but not avian cells (Wisdom and Verma, 1993 ). Thus, species-specific factors may determine the function of Fra-2 as a proliferative versus
differentiative agent. An additional determinant of Fra-2 function
could be its Jun family partner. c-Jun cooperates with ras to transform cells, but JunD suppresses
ras-induced transformation (Pfarr et al., 1994 ). In chick
embryo fibroblasts Fra-2/c-Jun diminishes transcription, but Fra-2/JunD
enhances transcriptional activity (Suzuki et al., 1991 ). The
Fra-2/c-Jun complex is crucial to transformation in these cells
(Nishina et al., 1990 ; Suzuki et al., 1994 ). In other cells, Fra-1, but
not Fra-2, complexes with c-Jun to mediate transformation (Mechta et
al., 1997 ). Thus, transcriptional regulation by complexes of Fra-1 or
Fra-2 with c-Jun may be a key to transformation. In contrast, the
present findings, together with those of other investigators (Rezzonico et al., 1995 ; McCabe et al., 1996 ), suggest that the Fra-2/JunD complex
is associated with conditions in which the cell cycle is arrested.
In PC12 cells NGF, but not EGF, increases the expression of a 45-46
kDa form of Fra-2 and concomitantly alters its DNA binding activity.
Both changes in expression level and post-translational modifications,
such as phosphorylation, alter the function of AP-1 proteins. Many
stimuli, including phorbol esters, serum, and growth factors, increase
both the expression levels and phosphorylation of AP-1 proteins,
including Fra-2 (Yoshida et al., 1991 ; Gruda et al., 1994 ; Murakami et
al., 1997 , 1999 ). Serum or v-src-induced transformation
elicits phosphorylation of Fra-2 in chick embryo fibroblasts (Yoshida
et al., 1991 ; Suzuki et al., 1994 ; Murakami et al., 1999 ) and Swiss 3T3
cells (Gruda et al., 1994 ). Phosphorylation changes the size of Fra-2
from 40 kDa to multiple larger forms ranging between 43 and 48 kDa
(Yoshida et al., 1991 ; Gruda et al., 1994 ; Murakami et al., 1997 , 1999 ;
Treinies et al., 1999 ). The size of the Fra-2 protein that is induced
by NGF in PC12 cells is consistent with a phosphorylated form of the
protein. Phosphorylation is associated with increased mobility of
Fra-2-containing complexes in EMSAs and with increased DNA binding
activity (Gruda et al., 1994 ), similar to that observed in NGF-treated
PC12 cells. It is likely that NGF-specific phosphorylation of Fra-2,
together with its increased expression, is responsible for the
increased DNA binding activity of Fra-2/JunD complexes to AP-1 and
CREB-responsive elements in PC12 cells.
Evidence suggests that ERK signaling is essential for the
phosphorylation and increased expression of Fra-2 (Gruda et al., 1994 ;
Murakami et al., 1997 , 1999 ; Cook et al., 1999 ; Treinies et al., 1999 ).
Cook et al. (1999) demonstrated that both transient and sustained ERK
activation (as detected by its phosphorylation) can trigger
c-fos expression, whereas sustained ERK signaling is
necessary for the induction of Fra-1 and Fra-2. The present findings
are in agreement with their report. EGF elicits a rapid brief ERK
phosphorylation, together with c-fos expression, but no
Fra-1 or Fra-2 expression. In contrast, NGF elicits a more sustained
ERK phosphorylation and induces expression of c-fos, Fra-1,
and Fra-2. The induction of the Fra-1 and Fra-2 is delayed, suggesting
that they occur downstream of ERK activation. Several studies indicate
that ERK signaling is responsible for the phosphorylation of Fra-1 and
Fra-2. ERK is a substrate for MEK, and the MEK inhibitor PD098059 (Pang
et al., 1995 ) blocks phosphorylation of Fra-1 and Fra-2 (Treinies et
al., 1999 ). In addition, constitutively active MEK induces
phosphorylation of Fra-2 (Murakami et al., 1999 ). Furthermore, there is
evidence that ERK itself phosphorylates Fra-1 and Fra-2 (Gruda et al.,
1994 ; Murakami et al., 1997 ).
Not only is ERK activity involved in phosphorylation of these protein,
it also is necessary for their increased expression (Murakami et al.,
1999 ; Treinies et al., 1999 ). The Fra-2 promoter is regulated via two
AP-1 sites and a CRE (Yoshida et al., 1993 ; Sonobe et al., 1995 ), and
these sites are responsible for Fra-2 upregulation in response to ERK
signaling (Murakami et al., 1997 , 1999 ). In fibroblasts during response
to serum, the AP-1 consensus sites in the Fra-2 promoter are occupied
successively by different AP-1 combinations. A complex of
c-fos/c-Jun binds from 1-2 hr after stimulation, followed
by Fra-2/c-Jun binding (Sonobe et al., 1995 ). A similar pattern of
transactivation could occur in NGF-treated PC12 cells. After NGF or EGF
treatment c-fos is upregulated. However, the
c-fos response is much greater for NGF than for EGF and
potentially could produce a greater transactivation of the Fra-2
promoter. In addition, Fra-2 autoregulates its own promoter activity.
ERK phosphorylation of Fra-2 converts it to a more efficient transcriptional activator, permitting positive autoregulation of the
Fra-2 promoter (Murakami et al., 1997 , 1999 ). A positive autoregulatory
loop would permit a continuous long-term enhancement of Fra-2
expression such as that observed in PC12 cells after NGF treatment.
The present work demonstrates that NGF, but not EGF, induces a
sustained upregulation and phosphorylation of the Fra-2 protein, together with an increase in DNA binding activity of the Fra-2/JunD complex in PC12 cells. These data support a hypothesis that growth factors coupled to sustained ERK activity upregulate protein expression at the transcriptional level via Fra-2/JunD transactivation of AP-1 and
CREB sites. Such sites are common in a variety of NGF-regulated late-response genes in PC12 cells, such as those listed in Table 1. For some of these genes, such as
interleukin-1 (IL-1 ; Alheim et al., 1996 ), neuropeptide Y (NP-Y;
Holliday et al., 1995 ), and VGF (D'Arcangelo et al., 1996 ; Di Rocco et
al., 1997 ; Luc and Wagner, 1997 ), AP-1 proteins or AP-1 and/or
CREB sites in the promoters are strongly implicated in NGF
responsiveness. Furthermore, VGF (Salton et al., 1991 ) and rat light
neurofilament (NF-L; Reeben et al., 1995 ) are upregulated
differentially by NGF over EGF. N-type
Ca2+ channels also are upregulated
selectively in PC12 cells by NGF (Colston et al., 1998 ). Although the
rat promoter sequence is not available, the human promoter for these
channel subunits contains two AP-1 binding sites (Kim et al., 1997 ).
Thus, the Fra-2/JunD complex could act as a broad regulatory control
switch that regulates transcription and promotes differentiation in
PC12 cells.
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|
Table 1.
NGF-sensitive late-response gene products,
transcriptionally regulated in PC12 cells via AP-1- or CREB-binding
sites
|
|
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Aug. 8, 2000; revised Sept. 29, 2000; accepted Oct. 11, 2000.
This work was supported in part by the Wesley Woods Foundation (B.H.W.)
and the Alice and Roy Richards Endowed Chair, Emory University
(B.H.W.).
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Bruce H. Wainer, Department
of Pathology, Emory School of Medicine, Wesley Woods Health Center,
Room 208, 1841 Clifton Road, Atlanta, GA 30329. E-mail:
bwainer{at}emory.edu.
 |
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