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DNA binding specificity and transactivation properties of SREBP-2 bound to multiple sites on the human apoA-II promoter
Authors:HY Kan  P Pissios  J Chambaz  VI Zannis
Affiliation:Section of Molecular Genetics, Cardiovascular Institute, Departments of Biochemistry and Medicine, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, MA 02118-2394, USA.
Abstract:DNase I footprinting of the apoA-II promoter using sterol regulatory element binding protein-2 (SREBP-2 (1-458)] expressed in bacteria identified four protected regions, designated AIIAB (-64 to -48), AIICD (-178 to -154), AIIDE (-352 to -332) and AIIK (-760 to -743), which bind SREBP-2 and contain either palindromic or direct repeat motifs. Potassium permanganate and dimethyl sulfate interference experiments using the AIIAB region as probe showed that the nucleotides of a decameric palindromic repeat RTCAMVTGMY and two 5' T residues participate in DNA-protein interactions. SREBP-2 transactivated the intact (-911/+29) apoA-II promoter 1.7-fold and truncated apoA-II promoter segments which contain one, two or three SREBP-2 sites 11- to 17-fold in HepG2 cells. Transactivation of a promoter construct containing the binding site AIIAB and the apoA-II enhancer, which includes the binding site AIIK, was abolished by mutations in element AIIAB. An SREBP-2 mutant defective in DNA binding caused a dose-dependent repression of the apoA-II promoter activity. Repression was also caused by an SREBP-2 mutant which lacks the N-terminal activation domain (residues 1-93) but binds normally to its cognate sites. In contrast, a double SREBP-2 mutant which lacks both the DNA binding and the activation domains has no effect on the apoA-II promoter activity. Overall, the findings suggest that SREBP-2 can transactivate the apoA-II promoter by binding to multiple sites. Furthermore, the repression caused by the DNA binding deficient mutants results from squelching of positive activator(s) which appear to recognize the activation domain of SREBP-2.
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