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BRIEF COMMUNICATION |
Departments of Reproductive Medicine (S.M.M., J.S.B., R.R., B.J.K., P.L.M.) and Neurosciences (P.L.M.), the Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program (S.M.M., J.S.B., P.L.M.), and the Center for Reproductive Science and Medicine (S.M.M., J.S.B., R.R., B.J.K., P.L.M.), University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0674
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Pamela L. Mellon, Ph.D, Department of Reproductive Medicine, 0674, University of California San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, California 92093-0674. E-mail: pmellon{at}ucsd.edu
| Abstract |
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T3-1, that endogenously expresses GnRHR, we have identified an ATTA element located at 298 relative to the transcriptional start site that is essential for basal expression of the GnRHR gene. LHX3, a member of the LIM homeodomain family, binds the 298 ATTA site in vitro as well as to the endogenous GnRHR promoter in vivo. Additionally, LHX3 specifically activates through this 298 ATTA site in transient transfection assays. LHX3 is essential for pituitary development and has been implicated in the regulation of a number of pituitary specific genes; however, this is the first report identifying its role in the regulation of GnRHR. | Introduction |
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Several critical cis-regulatory elements for both basal expression and hormonal regulation of GnRHR have been identified in the proximal promoter region of the gene. A steroidogenic factor-1 (SF-1) binding site at 181/173, relative to the major transcriptional start site (2), an activating protein-1 (AP-1) site at 276/269 (3, 4), and the GnRHR activating sequence (GRAS) at 329/318 (3) have been shown to be necessary for full basal expression of the gene. The GRAS element is also required for activin and GnRH induction and binds to AP-1, Smad, and FoxL2 proteins (5, 6, 7). GnRH activates expression of GnRHR at an element termed sequence underlying responsiveness to GnRH-1 (SURG-1) at 292/285 and the AP-1 site at 276/269 (SURG-2) (4). Recently, Oct-1 and NFY were reported to bind SURG-1 and contribute to both basal and GnRH-stimulated expression of GnRHR (8). Additionally, the transcription factor pituitary homeobox-1 (Pitx-1) activates the mouse GnRHR promoter using sequences between 308 and 264 (9).
LHX3 (LIM3/P-LIM) is expressed throughout the developing and adult anterior pituitary as well as in the developing nervous system and is required for normal pituitary development (10, 11, 12). The LIM homeodomain family of transcription factors, to which LHX3 belongs, is characterized by a homeodomain that serves as a DNA-binding domain and two amino-terminal LIM domains that serve as protein-protein interaction domains (13). In the Lhx3 null mouse, the pituitary primordium initially forms but fails to grow and differentiate, and four of the five anterior pituitary cell lineages, the gonadotropes, thyrotropes, somatotropes, and lactotropes, are absent (12). Humans with mutations in LHX3 display combined pituitary hormone deficiency, providing further evidence for the functional conservation of LHX3 between species and the critical role this protein plays in pituitary development (14). LHX3 is known to activate expression of several pituitary genes including
-glycoprotein subunit (
GSU), prolactin (Prl), TSHß, FSHß, and the POU homeodomain transcription factor, Pit-1 (11, 15). Additionally, an unidentified LIM family member was implicated in binding to the distal enhancer of the rat GnRHR by competition experiments with the pituitary glycoprotein basal element (PGBE) of the
GSU (16), a sequence known to bind both LHX3 and another LIM family member, LHX2, in vitro (11, 17).
In this study, the proximal GnRHR promoter was examined for sequence elements necessary for basal expression. Transient transfection of a mouse GnRHR-luciferase reporter into
T3-1 cells, a gonadotrope-derived cell line that endogenously expresses GnRHR and that has been used extensively to study GnRHR regulation, identified an ATTA element at 298 in the mouse GnRHR promoter that is necessary for basal expression and that binds the transcription factor LHX3 in vitro and in vivo. This study furthers our understanding of the regulation of GnRHR and demonstrates a functional role for the transcription factor LHX3 in this regulation.
| Materials and Methods |
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Cell culture, transient transfections, and luciferase and ß-galactosidase assays
T3-1 cells were grown as previously described (21). The day before transfection,
T3-1 cells were aliquoted to 12-well plates at a density of 200,000 cells per well. FuGENE 6 transfection reagent (Roche Molecular Biochemicals, Indianapolis, IN) was used according to the manufacturers protocol. Each well was transfected with 700 ng luciferase reporter plasmid along with 200 ng plasmid containing Rous sarcoma virus promoter controlling ß-galactosidase gene expression as a control for transfection efficiency. The cells were harvested 48 h after transfection. For cotransfection experiments, 700 ng expression plasmid or the empty plasmid control was also transfected. Cells were prepared and assayed for luciferase and ß-galactosidase activity as previously described (21) with the following exceptions: 60 µl lysis buffer was used to lyse the cells, and 20 µl extract was directly transferred to a 96-well plate to be measured for either luciferase or ß-galactosidase activity.
Normalization of data and statistics
All experiments were performed in triplicate and were repeated at least three times. To normalize for transfection efficiency, all luciferase values were divided by ß-galactosidase, and the triplicate values were averaged. To control for interexperimental variation, the empty plasmid, PGL3, was transfected with RSV-ßgal and any relevant overexpression vectors, and the average PGL3/ßgal value was calculated. Average GnRHRluc/ßgal values were divided by the corresponding PGL3/ßgal value. Values obtained from each independent experiment were then averaged, and statistics were performed using the statistical analysis program JMP. Significance was set at P
0.05. Data are presented relative to PGL3, and error bars represent SEM.
EMSA
Nuclear extracts were prepared from
T3-1, LßT2, and NIH3T3 cells as previously described (21). The following probes were end-labeled using T4 Polynucleotide Kinase (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) according to the manufacturers protocol: wild-type (WT) ATTA, 5'-GAAAACCTATTCATTAAGGCTAATTGGATG-3'; PGBE, 5'-ATATCAGGTACTTAGCTAATTAAATGTGCT-3'; and 298 mut, 5'-GAAAACCTATTCcggcAGGCTAATTGGATG-3' and were column purified using Micro Bio-Spin Chromatography Columns (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA). Binding reactions were carried out using 2 µg nuclear protein and 4 fmol [32P]-labeled oligonucleotide in a 20-µl reaction containing 5 mM dithiothreitol, 0.025 µg/µl Poly dIdC, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride, 0.25 mg/ml BSA, and binding buffer [50 mM HEPES (pH 7.8), 250 mM KCl, 5 mM EDTA, 25 mM spermidine, 30% glycerol, and 10% Ficol]. For supershift assays, 1.5 µg LHX3 (U.S. Biological, Swampscott, MA) or normal rabbit IgG (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA) antibody was used. In competitions, 250-fold excess of unlabeled oligonucleotide was used. Reactions were carried out, and the gel was run as described in (21).
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay
T3-1 cells were grown to confluency in 15-cm plates, and proteins were cross-linked to DNA by the addition of 1% formaldehyde directly to the cell medium. The nuclear fraction was obtained, and chromatin was sonicated to an average length of 1 kb in sonication buffer [50 mM HEPES, 140 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% Na-deoxycholate, and 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)]. The lysate was diluted with ChIP dilution buffer [0.01% SDS, 1.1% Triton, 1.2 mM EDTA, 16.7 mM Tris (pH 8), and 167 mM NaCl] to a final volume of 3.5 ml and precleared with 100 µl Protein A/G PLUS-Agarose beads (Santa Cruz Biotechnology). Protein-DNA complexes were incubated overnight with either the same LHX3 antibody used in EMSAs or a nonspecific IgG control and precipitated with Protein A/G beads (Santa Cruz Biotechnology). A fraction of the protein DNA was not precipitated but set aside for later examination of the total chromatin content (termed input). Beads were sequentially washed with the following buffers: low-salt wash buffer [0.1% SDS, 1% Triton X-100, 2 mM EDTA, 20 mM Tris (pH 8), and 150 mM NaCl], high-salt wash buffer (low-salt wash buffer but with 500 mM NaCl), LiCl wash buffer [250 mM LiCl, 1% NP-40, 1% Na-deoxycholate, 1 mM EDTA, and 10 mM Tris (pH 8)], and twice with Tris-EDTA. Protein-DNA complexes were eluted with elution buffer (1% SDS and 0.1 M NaHCO3), and cross-links were reversed with the addition of 200 mM NaCl and incubation at 65 C for 4 h. DNA was phenol-chloroform-extracted and ethanol-precipitated. Precipitated DNA was resuspended in 50 µl nuclease-free water, the input fraction was resuspended in 500 µl, and the sequence of interest was amplified by PCR. Primers used in PCR (5'-GCAAAATGCATTTGAAAAGCAATTGTTTTG-3' and 5'-ATAAAAAGACGGGCCATCTGC-3') spanned the 441 to 202 region of the mouse GnRHR gene and generated a single 239 band on a 5% PAGE stained with ethidium bromide. PCR conditions were as follows: 1 min at 95 C, 1 min at 63 C, and 1 min at 72 C repeated 26 times followed by an extension of 10 min at 72 C. To ensure that the PCR was still in the linear phase after 26 cycles, a dilution curve of the input was performed. PCR was performed on input concentrations of 0.5x, 1x, 2x, and 3x to test whether the PCR end product reflected the relative amounts of starting material.
| Results |
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T3-1 cells. A mutation in the ATTA site at 298 significantly decreased basal expression of GnRHR by approximately 60% relative to the WT GnRHR reporter gene (Fig. 1B
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T3-1 extracts, EMSAs were performed. An oligonucleotide encompassing the 310/281 region of the gene was end labeled with 32P and incubated with
T3-1 nuclear extracts. Eight protein complexes were detected (Fig. 2
T3-1 cell line, the 298 ATTA probe was also incubated with nuclear proteins from another gonadotrope-derived cell line, LßT2, immortalized at a later developmental time point than the
T3-1 cells (23) or from the fibroblast cell line, NIH3T3 (Fig. 2
T3-1 extracts were also present using LßT2 nuclear extracts. Although relative levels of protein binding appear to differ between these two cell lines, the mutation of the 298 ATTA site had the same effect in LßT2 cells as in the
T3-1, producing a 60% decrease in basal GnRHR expression (data not shown). Interestingly, complexes bound by the 298 ATTA probe in the NIH3T3 nuclear extracts were significantly different. Complexes 1, 3, 4, and 5 are either not present or are severely diminished in NIH3T3 cells (compare lanes 1 and 3), and complex 2 is significantly reduced. Complex 6 is faintly seen in all three cell types, whereas complexes 7 and 8 are slightly increased in comparison with
T3-1 and LßT2 cells. These results indicate that specific
T3-1 nuclear protein complexes form on the 298 ATTA probe and that these proteins are enriched in the gonadotrope-derived cells.
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GSU, Prl, TSHß, FSHß, and Pit-1 (11, 15). It is expressed throughout the pituitary and in LßT2 and
T3-1 cells (10, 11), but it is not highly expressed in other cell types. LHX3 is known to bind to the consensus sequence TAATTAATTAT with the second ATTA repeat being the most critical (24). The promoter sequence from 304 to 294 of the mouse GnRHR is ctATTcATTAa. This is a 7- of 11-bp match with the LHX3 consensus-binding sequence, including an exact match to the critical second ATTA repeat (lowercase letters indicate deviation from the consensus sequence). Based on this information and our EMSA data, we chose to test whether LHX3 binds the 298 ATTA site.
Because LHX3 has previously been shown to bind the PGBE of the mouse
GSU (11), the PGBE was used as a positive control for binding of LHX3. PGBE and 298 ATTA oligonucleotides were radiolabeled and incubated with nuclear extracts from
T3-1 cells, and interacting complexes were compared. Many of the complexes formed on the 298 ATTA probe comigrated with complexes formed on the PGBE probe (compare lanes 1 and 5, Fig. 3A
). Addition of excess unlabeled PGBE oligonucleotide (lane 8) efficiently competed for all protein complexes, further suggesting that the same proteins interact with both sites. Inclusion of an antibody specific for LHX3 in the EMSA reaction leads to diminution of complexes 1 and 3 (arrows and asterisk, lane 3). These same complexes were also decreased on the PGBE probe upon inclusion of the LHX3 antibody (lane 7). Inclusion of a nonspecific normal rabbit IgG antibody had no effect (lane 4). Furthermore, when
T3-1 nuclear extracts were incubated with the mutant 298 ATTA probe, complexes 1 and 3 were no longer present (lane 9). These results indicate that the 298 ATTA site is capable of interacting specifically with protein complexes that contain LHX3 and that this element is necessary for LHX3 binding. Because the 298 ATTA probe also contains the 290 TAAT site shown to bind Oct-1 and NF-Y (4, 8), we tested for binding of LHX3 to the 290 TAAT site independent of the 298 ATTA site. Although we could not detect binding of LHX3 to the 290 TAAT under our conditions (data not shown), we cannot eliminate the possibility that the 290 TAAT site could facilitate binding of LHX3 to the 298 probe.
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T3-1 cells using an antibody specific for LHX3. PCR primers encompassing the 298 ATTA site were used to detect precipitation of genomic DNA. As expected, these primers amplified a 240-bp region of the mouse GnRHR promoter from input chromatin (Fig. 3B
The 298 ATTA site is sufficient for induction by LHX3
To determine whether the 298 ATTA site is sufficient to confer LHX3 responsiveness to a heterologous promoter, we used a plasmid with four tandem copies of the 298 ATTA site from 303 to 290 controlling luciferase gene expression cloned upstream of a minimal 81-bp thymidine-kinase promoter. Cotransfection of the 298 multimer plasmid and the LHX3 expression plasmid caused a 5- to 6-fold increase in reporter activity in comparison with the multimerized reporter cotransfected with the empty expression plasmid (Fig. 4
). In contrast, LHX3 did not activate expression of the multimerized reporter containing the cggc mutation at the 298 site (Fig. 4
). Thus, LHX3 can function specifically through the 298 ATTA site to activate reporter gene expression.
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| Discussion |
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In EMSA, the 298 ATTA oligonucleotide binds eight distinct complexes in
T3-1 nuclear extracts. Several of these complexes do not form with the NIH3T3 fibroblast extracts, suggesting that expression of these nuclear proteins may be gonadotrope restricted. LHX3 expression is limited to the pituitary and nervous system (10, 11), and it is critical for pituitary development (12). We found that LHX3 binds the GnRHR promoter at the 298 site in vitro as well as to the in vivo promoter. This is in contrast to a recent study by Kam et al. (8). In this study, an EMSA probe that extended from 300 to 277, including both the 298 ATTA and 290 TAAT sites, bound Oct-1 and NF-Y but showed no supershift upon inclusion of an antibody to LHX3 (8). This could be due to the relative position of the 298 ATTA site on the EMSA probe. As mentioned previously, the reported LHX3 consensus site is 11 bp long (24) and would extend from 304 to 294 of the mouse GnRHR promoter and thus would not be entirely contained in the probe used in that study. Because it is likely that bases directly upstream of the 298 ATTA site play a role in stabilizing the binding of LHX3 to the promoter, this finding is not unexpected.
The proximal 5'-regulatory region of the GnRHR is highly active and a number of transcription factors have been identified that are important for its regulation. This multiplicity of factors may be reflected in the complex banding pattern we have observed with the 298 ATTA probe, and it will be interesting to determine what other factors play a role in GnRHR expression at this site. LIM homeodomain proteins are known to interact with a variety of proteins through the LIM domain, and such cofactors could be interacting with LHX3 at the 298 ATTA site (13). Cofactors that have been shown to bind to LHX3 include NL1 (LDB1/CLIM/Chip) (25, 26, 27), SLB (19), and RLIM (28). NL1 binds LIM domain-containing proteins, and through it, LHX3 can interact with other LIM family members (29) as well as with non-LIM transcription factors such as the Otx proteins (27). In contrast, SLB selectively binds LHX3 and LHX4 and may specifically modulate their actions (19). RLIM is a transcriptional repressor that functions through recruitment of the Sin3A/histone deacetylase transcriptional repressor complex (28). In addition to these cofactors and their interacting partners, LHX3 has also been reported to interact directly with the LIM-HD protein, Isl1 (29) and Pit-1.
SF-1, AP-1, Smads, FoxL2, NFY, Oct-1, and Pitx-1 are important regulators of basal and hormonal expression of GnRHR (2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9). Not only are all of these transcription factors known regulators of GnRHR, in some cases, there is evidence that they function together to cooperatively regulate GnRHR gene expression. AP-1 and Smads cooperate to mediate GnRH and activin induction of GnRHR at the GRAS element (6). Additionally, Oct-1 and AP-1 binding at the SURG-1 and SURG-2 elements, respectively, appear to interact in supporting basal expression of GnRHR (8). Whether LHX3 functionally interacts with any of these transcription factors remains to be investigated. In other promoter contexts, LHX3 acts synergistically with Pit-1 in regulating transcription of the
GSU, Pit-1, TSHß, and Prl pituitary genes (11). LHX3 also synergistically interacts with Pitx-1 on the
GSU promoter when expressed with NL1 (27). Additionally, LHX3 and NeuroM have been shown to interact synergistically on a motor neuron enhancer from the Hb9 gene (30).
LHX3 has been found to be involved in the regulation of a number of pituitary genes including Prl, TSHß,
GSU, FSHß, Pit-1, and, in this study, GnRHR. Due to the critical nature of LHX3 in pituitary development, it is perhaps not surprising that it plays a role in regulating a number of pituitary-specific genes. Because LHX3 is a highly versatile transcription factor that can potentially interact with a variety of partners, specificity of this regulation is likely due to cell-specific complex formation with interacting transcription factors. Although the
T3-1 cell line represents a gonadotrope cell at an early stage of development, LHX3 expression in the pituitary continues through adulthood (10), and it is likely that LHX3 is responsible for maintaining pituitary gene expression in the adult as well as during development. This study demonstrates an important role for LIM proteins, and potentially for their interacting partners as well, in supporting basal expression of the GnRHR gene, thus expanding our understanding of their critical role in the regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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First Published Online February 10, 2005
1 S.M.M. and J.S.B. contributed equally to this work. ![]()
Abbreviations: AP-1, Activating protein-1; ChIP, chromatin immunoprecipitation; GnRHR, GnRH receptor; GRAS, GnRHR activating sequence;
GSU,
-glycoprotein subunit; PGBE, pituitary glycoprotein basal element; Pit-1, POU homeodomain transcription factor-1; Pitx-1, pituitary homeobox-1; Prl, prolactin; SDS, sodium dodecyl sulfate; SF-1, steroidogenic factor-1; SURG, sequence underlying responsiveness to GnRH; WT, wild type.
Received December 3, 2004.
Accepted for publication February 1, 2005.
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-subunit promoter by a LIM-homeodomain transcription factor. Mol Cell Biol 14:29852993This article has been cited by other articles:
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