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Division of Gastroenterology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19104
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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gene expression has been
recently shown to cause both chronic inflammatory arthritis as well as
intestinal inflammation with characteristics similar to patients with
Crohns disease (7).
Promoter analysis of various cytokine genes using a reporter gene
approach has demonstrated significant basal transcriptional activity in
the absence of immune stimulation in which expression of the endogenous
gene is silent (8, 9). In part, this aberrant promoter
activity may be due to constitutive expression of transcription factors
shown to activate these promoters (10). For example,
constitutive expression of nuclear proteins capable of binding to both
the CCAAT/enhancer binding protein and/or the AP-1 element(s) of
the IL-8 promoter account for the basal activity of this promoter in
colon cancer cell lines. However, we have shown that the
POU-homeodomain transcription factor, Oct-1, plays a role in repressing
this basal activity by binding independently to an element overlapping
that of the CCAAT/enhancer binding protein (10). Recently,
a multiprotein complex that binds to the promoter of the monocyte
chemoattractant protein-1
(MCP-1)3 gene has been
shown to repress platelet-derived growth factor-induced gene
transcription in the absence of a heptad sequence located in the 3'
untranslated region (UTR) (11). Finally, AT-rich
elements in the 3' UTR of the TNF-
gene have been shown to attenuate
basal expression, presumably by altering mRNA stability
(12).
Second, mechanisms exist that inhibit the activation of chemokine gene
transcription in response to immune stimulation. For example, the state
of cellular differentiation may alter the regulation of immune response
genes. The intestinal epithelium is spatially segregated into a
proliferating, undifferentiated compartment and a nonproliferating,
differentiated compartment, which are both in the small and large
intestine (13). Emerging evidence suggests that cellular
differentiation of the intestinal epithelium attenuates the activation
of the immune response. Colonic inflammation induces the expression of
the proinflammatory cytokine IL-l
and the injury response gene,
manganese superoxide dismutase, in rat colonic epithelial cells located
only in the undifferentiated crypt compartment (14, 15).
Furthermore, epithelial neutrophil-activating protein 78, a
neutrophil chemoattractant, has been shown to be expressed at high
levels only by colonocytes in the proliferative crypt compartment in
patients with inflammatory bowel disease (16, 17). Studies
of transgenic chimeric mice, which disrupt the epithelial cell adhesion
molecule E-cadherin along the entire crypt villus axis but not in the
villus epithelium alone, produced an inflammatory bowel disease
resembling Crohns disease (18). Finally, it has been
shown that IL-1
signal transduction is disrupted in
methotrexate-induced differentiation of HT-29 colon cancer cells
(19).
We have been studying the regulation of IL-8 gene transcription in the Caco-2 colon cancer cell line. In the preconfluent proliferative state, these cells are relatively undifferentiated. However, several days after confluency, Caco-2 cells spontaneously develop markers of a differentiated phenotype, including the expression of digestive enzymes, certain ion transporters, tight junctions, a well-developed brush border, and a polarized morphology (20). We have shown that expression of multiple proinflammatory cytokines, including IL-8, are inhibited by spontaneous differentiation of the Caco-2 colon cancer cell line by growth to a postconfluent state (21).
We report herein that cellular differentiation of Caco-2 cells inhibits IL-8 gene expression by preventing transcriptional activation in response to immune stimulation. Unexpectedly, stably transfected reporter gene constructs, as well as marked IL-8 minigenes, demonstrate that the cis-acting regulatory elements required to silence IL-8 gene transcription upon Caco-2 cell differentiation are not contained within the immediate IL-8 gene locus. These same constructs also demonstrate significant aberrant basal activity that can be dramatically enhanced by histone acetylation, conditions under which the endogenous IL-8 gene remains completely silent. This observation was confirmed in vivo through the analysis of transgenic mice created with a similar IL-8 minigene construct. These animals demonstrated aberrant basal activity of the transgene predominantly in the intestinal tract. In contrast, Caco-2 cells stably transfected with a 75-kb genomic fragment containing the IL-8 gene demonstrate that this construct fully recapitulates the endogenous pattern of IL-8 gene expression with the absence of basal gene expression and the repression of expression by cellular differentiation. Therefore, epigenetic mechanisms involving cis-acting elements that are distant from the immediate IL-8 locus are required to silence both basal- and immune-stimulated IL-8 gene transcription.
| Materials and Methods |
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Caco-2 cells (obtained from American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA) were plated at a density of 4 x 104 cells/cm2 in 10-cm dishes containing DMEM with 10% FBS and penicillin-streptomycin as previously described (22). Preconfluent cells refer to Caco-2 cells on day 5 after plating, whereas cells grown to day 14 after plating are referred to as postconfluent.
RNA isolation, nuclear run-ons, and RT-PCR
Total RNA for Northern blots were isolated by the guanidinium
thiocyanate-CsCl gradient method (23). The IL-8 gene
transcription rate was determined by nuclear run-on assay using
conditions described previously (24). Nuclei were isolated
by Nonidet P-40 lysis and Dounce homogenization (25) from
pre- and postconfluent Caco-2 cells either in the resting state or
after 25 min of stimulation with IL-l
(5 ng/ml). The DNA plasmids
used were the 3' UTR of the IL-8 cDNA (1118-bp insert amplified by
RT-PCR and cloned into pKS- (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA)), a
previously described cDNA of the coding region for IL-8
(21) also used for Northern blots, pKS-, pHFBA-l (human
-actin cDNA) (26), and GAPDH (27).
RT-PCR of IL-8 used the primers IL-8 (+103) and IL-8 (exon 4) (21) and the following amplification conditions: 94°C for 1 min, 55°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 1 min for 25 cycles. Using the same conditions, IL-8transcripts were amplified by RT-PCR in transgenic animal tissues using the following primers: 5'-ACTTCCAAGCTGGCCGTGGC-3' and 5'-CAAAAACTTCTCCACAACCC-3'.
Cell transfections, reporter assays, and EMSA
Luciferase reporter gene constructs containing either 135 or
1469 bp of the IL-8 5' flank were amplified, cloned into the pGL-2
basic reporter plasmid (Promega, Madison, WI), and sequenced as
previously described (21). Stable transfectants of these
constructs in Caco-2 cells were developed using a modified calcium
phosphate method of transfection along with selection using G418 by
cotransfection with pRc/CMV-neo (21). Transient
transfections were performed using the same method of transfection with
luciferase activity normalized to
-galactosidase activity
(10). Conditions for nuclear protein isolation and EMSAs
of NF-
B have been described previously (10).
Development of hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged IL-8 minigene constructs
The strategy for development of the marked IL-8 minigene
construct, as well as its analysis in Caco-2 cells, is outlined in Fig. 3
. A genomic clone for human IL-8 in a P1 plasmid of
75 kb in size
was obtained by PCR screening of a P1 genomic library (Research
Genetics, Huntsville, AL). Using a previously described restriction map
of IL-8 (28), the IL-8 gene locus was isolated as two
EcoRI fragments cloned into the pKS- (Stratagene) plasmid,
which had the SacI site in the polylinker region destroyed
by Klenow blunt-end formation and subsequent relegation. Using partial
digests, these two EcoRI fragments (3.3 and 1.8 kb in size)
were combined to reconstitute the IL-8 gene locus in a single plasmid.
This construct contains 1469 bp of the 5' flank, the entire structural
gene, and the entire 3' UTR extending beyond the polyadenylation signal
(28, 29) (Fig. 3
A) and was named pE3.3/E1.8. A
33-bp HA tag was then inserted into a SacI site located in
exon 3 of the IL-8 gene using previously described methods, creating
pE3.3(HA)/E1.8 (30). Orientation of the insert was
confirmed by sequencing. A second construct containing 5 kb of the IL-8
5' flank was developed by ligating a 5.0 PstI fragment
extending from exon 1 at the 3' end to
5 kb upstream into a
PstI digest of pE3.3/E1.8. Orientation of the
PstI fragment in this construct, named pPst5.0(HA)/E1.8, was
confirmed by sequencing.
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To study long-range DNA effects on IL-8 gene expression in
vitro, a HA tag was inserted into exon 3 of the IL-8 gene within the
context of the P1 clone described above. The method used was a slightly
modified version of a previously described method for the modification
of bacterial artificial chromosomes by homologous recombination
in Escherischia coli (31). This procedure is
described schematically in Fig. 6
. The PstI site in exon 1
of pE3.3(HA)/E1.8 was converted to a SalI site with the
addition of a linker. This plasmid was subsequently digested with
SalI to release a fragment of the IL-8 genomic clone
containing the HA tag in exon 3. The SalI fragment was
cloned into the shuttle vector pSV1.RecA, which contains the RecA gene
as well as a temperature-sensitive origin of replication (kindly
provided by Dr. N. Heintz, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY).
The shuttle vector (tetracycline resistant) was transformed into
competent E. coli containing the P1 clone (kanamycin
resistant) with the IL-8 gene locus. Cointegrates of these two plasmids
were created by growing the bacteria on tetracycline and kanamycin
plates at a restrictive temperature of 43°C. Three cointegrates were
identified by Southern blot analysis (Fig. 6
B). Insertion of
the HA tag in exon 3 destroys the SacI restriction site,
resulting in a larger 3.3-kb band on Southern blot. Resolution of the
cointegrate to complete the homologous combination by removing the
pSV1.RecA plasmid was performed by growing the cointegrates on a
kanamycin plate containing fusaric acid at 37°C for 3 days. The
resolved P1 clones, named P1(IL-8), were then analyzed by two
successive Southern blots to verify that homologous recombination had
occurred and was complete. At the 5' end, continuity of the IL-8 locus
from the original P1 clone with the IL-8 genomic fragment from the
shuttle vector was verified by a Southern blot identical with that
described in Fig. 6
B. This blot also confirmed presence of
the HA tag. To verify continuity of the original P1 IL-8 locus with the
HA tagged genomic fragment at the 3' end, a Southern blot of the
resolved P1 clone and the original P1 plasmid was performed after
digestion with either BamHI or KpnI. This blot,
probed with an EcoRI/KpnI fragment of the IL-8 3'
UTR, showed an identical size band from the two plasmids digested with
either restriction enzyme (data not shown).
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Mice and rats do not have an IL-8 gene. Therefore, transgenic animals can be developed using an IL-8 minigene construct without any modifications in the genomic sequence that could alter patterns of gene expression. The IL-8 minigene was released from pE3.3/E1.8 by digestion with NotI and SalI and purified by gel electrophoresis and Elutip (Schleicher & Schuell, Keene, NH) column chromatography. Following ethanol precipitation, the minigene insert was dissolved in Milli-Q water and delivered to the transgenic core facility at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine (Philadelphia, PA). The male pronuclei of zygotes were microinjected with 20004000 copies of the recombinant DNA (32). The morulae were transferred to the uteri of pseudo pregnant female mice. Tail DNA isolated from the offspring of these females were analyzed after digestion with EcoRI by Southern blot using an EcoRI fragment of the IL-8 3' UTR (E1.8) as a probe to identify founder animals and to determine relative copy number. Founder animals were crossed with normal C57BL/6J mice to produce F1 progeny for analysis. The transgenic lines were mated and maintained at the University of Pennsylvania animal facilities.
Transgenic mice were sacrificed under pentobarbital sedation and cervical dislocation. The following tissues were removed: brain, lung, heart, kidney, skeletal muscle, testis, liver, pancreas, spleen, stomach, small intestine (jejunum and ileum), and colon. RNA was isolated from each tissue, and RT-PCR was performed to determine the abundance and distribution of mRNA expression for IL-8. To verify that the IL-8 minigene could be activated appropriately by an inflammatory stimulus, colonic inflammation was induced in both transgenic and normal littermates by the administration of an acetic acid enema (14). A flexible catheter was inserted 2 cm into the colon and followed by the administration of either 0.5 ml of either PBS or 10% acetic acid in PBS. After 6 h, the animals were sacrificed and the distal half of the colon isolated for RNA extraction and RT-PCR for IL-8 as described above.
| Results |
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Stimulation of the colon cancer cell line, Caco-2, with IL-1
induces high level expression of IL-8 mRNA (33). In
contrast, isolated colonic epithelial cells, like Caco-2 cells, do not
respond to stimulation with TNF-
, perhaps due to the absence of
TNF-
R expression (33, 34, 35, 36). We have previously shown
that spontaneous differentiation of Caco-2 cells during growth to a
postconfluent state inhibits both the mRNA and protein expression for
IL-8 (21). Nuclear run-ons show that immune stimulation of
preconfluent Caco-2 cells strongly activates transcription of the IL-8
gene, a response that is inhibited during the process of cellular
differentiation in postconfluent Caco-2 cells (Fig. 1
A). Many mechanisms that
result in the repression of gene transcription involve covalent
modification of nucleosomes through the removal of acetyl groups from
histone proteins through histone deacetylases (37, 38).
Inhibition of histone deacetylase activity by either butyrate or
trichostatin A has been shown to induce the activation of genes
repressed by histone deacetylases (39). Therefore, the
activation of IL-8 mRNA expression in postconfluent Caco-2 cells with
increasing concentrations of butyrate is consistent with a histone
deacetylase-dependent mechanism of silencing (Fig. 1
B).
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All previous described cis-acting regulatory elements
of the IL-8 gene have been located within the first 135 bp upstream of
the transcriptional initiation site (10, 40). Therefore,
to determine whether cellular differentiation of Caco-2 cells alters
the transcriptional activation of this promoter, clonal populations of
Caco-2 cells stably transfected with luciferase reporter genes
regulated by the IL-8 5' flank were studied. We have previously shown
that the stimulation of these clones with IL-1
induces high-level
luciferase activity (21). Although IL-8 mRNA expression is
repressed when these clones are grown to a postconfluent state,
induction of luciferase activity is actually greater in postconfluent
cells (Fig. 2
A). This clearly
demonstrates that the elements in the IL-8 gene required to silence
expression in postconfluent Caco-2 cells are not located within the
immediate 5'-flanking region of the gene. In fact, the observed
increase in promoter activation in postconfluent cells is consistent
with the increase in NF-
B binding activity observed by EMSA using
nuclear extracts isolated from postconfluent cells (Fig. 2
B).
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5 kb (Pst5.0(HA)/E1.8) of the 5' flank, the
entire structural gene, as well as the entire 3' UTR including the
endogenous polyadenylation signal. The results showed that IL-8 mRNA
expression of the marked minigene was either equal to or greater in
postconfluent compared with preconfluent cells (Fig. 3Basal transcriptional activity of the IL-8 gene is silenced by a mechanism independent of histone deacetylation that requires elements distant from the immediate gene locus
Additional analysis of the Caco-2 clones permanently transfected
with the marked IL-8 minigenes showed that they all demonstrated
expression of transgene activity in the absence of immune activation
with IL-1
(Figs. 3
B and 4D). This aberrant
basal activity is present in the absence of any endogenous gene
expression. We have previously shown that stimulation of Caco-2 cells
with IL-1
induces activation of the IL-8 promoter, as measured using
a luciferase reporter assay, by 50- to 100-fold (10).
However, even in the absence of immune stimulation, the IL-8 promoter
shows substantial basal activity that is >100-fold greater than the
background activity observed with the promoterless vector (Fig. 4
A). Indeed, the magnitude of
this basal IL-8 promoter activity approaches that observed with the
potent sucrase-isomaltase intestinal promoter characterized
specifically in the Caco-2 cell line (22). This aberrant
basal activity, as observed with either luciferase reporter constructs
or IL-8-marked minigenes, can be dramatically enhanced by inhibiting
histone deacetylase activity using either butyrate or trichostatin A
(Fig. 4
, B and D). In contrast, endogenous IL-8
gene expression remains completely absent under the same conditions
(Fig. 4
, C and D), demonstrating that the
silencing of basal activity is independent of histone deacetylase
activity.
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-mediated immune stimulation, expression of either the IL-8
reporter construct or the endogenous IL-8 gene was enhanced by sodium
butyrate (Fig. 4The immediate IL-8 gene locus shows aberrant transcriptional activity in transgenic mice
To confirm that the IL-8 transgene would also demonstrate aberrant basal activity in vivo, as well as to determine whether such an activity occurs in a tissue-restricted fashion, transgenic mice were developed using the IL-8 minigene construct pE3.3/E1.8. Because mice do not have an endogenous IL-8 gene, the IL-8 transgene used for the development of these animals did not require insertion of the HA tag used in the cell culture experiments. This provided a unique opportunity to exclude any artifactual results of this tag on patterns of IL-8 gene expression.
Two founders were identified by Southern blot, F#8 had a 6-fold higher
copy number than F#3 (Fig. 5
A). Transcripts for IL-8 were
determined by RT-PCR using total RNA isolated from various tissues of
animals derived from these two founder lines (Fig. 5
B).
Basal activity of the IL-8 trangene was detected in several tissues
from both the high and low copy number transgenic mice. Interestingly,
expression was not detected in all tissues but was rather restricted to
a subset of tissues. Although there was some variability in the pattern
of IL-8 expression between the two founder lines, detectable expression
in the small intestine (jejunum and ileum) and colon was consistently
present in both transgenic lines. It is also interesting that no
expression was detected in the stomachs of either transgenic line.
Finally, in Fig. 5
C, we show that the IL-8 minigene can be
activated by acetic acid-induced colonic inflammation in both the low
and high copy number transgenic animals. These results also show that
the relative levels of basal to activated IL-8 minigene expression are
similar to those observed in the Caco-2 cell culture model system
(Figs. 3
B and 4D). In total, the results in
transgenic mice validate and extend the findings in cell culture with
respect to aberrant basal activity.
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The studies above show that two independent mechanisms of IL-8 gene silencing cannot be recapitulated even when a marked IL-8 minigene is stably integrated into the chromatin of Caco-2 cells. Therefore, genomic elements that reside outside the immediate IL-8 gene locus must play a critical role in silencing this gene. Indeed, experiments from both Drosophila and mouse transgenics have shown that distant elements such as enhancers, locus control regions, or insulators are sometimes required to fully recapitulate patterns of endogenous gene expression (43, 44, 45, 46). These elements may reside 50 kb or more away from the immediate gene locus.
Therefore, we inserted a HA tag into exon 3 of the IL-8 gene
within the context of a 75-kb P1 human genomic clone to determine
whether it was possible to develop a model system in which a transgene
could recapitulate the silencing patterns of the endogenous IL-8 gene.
The strategy to create this extended minigene, named P1(IL-8) and
described in Fig. 6
A, used
homologous recombination in a fashion similar to that described
previously (31). Southern blots were used to identify
cointegrates (Fig. 6
B) as well as to confirm appropriate
resolution of the homologous recombination resulting in the production
of an IL-8 transgene tagged in exon 3 (data not shown). Clonal
populations of Caco-2 cells stably transfected with this construct were
subsequently produced. Southern blot analysis was used to determine
copy number insertion of all the IL-8 minigene constructs permanently
transfected into Caco-2 cells (Fig. 7
).
To verify that the patterns of IL-8 minigene expression were copy
number- and insertion site-independent, multiple Caco-2 clones were
analyzed with varying minigene copy numbers, and several minigene pools
were also analyzed.
Analysis of two different clones of Caco-2 cells containing different
copy numbers of the P1(IL-8) minigene show that the transgene pattern
expression now recapitulates that of the endogenous gene (Fig. 8
A). There is a significant
decrease in expression of both endogenous and minigene mRNAs in
postconfluent cells. In postconfluent cells, the induction of DRA, a
ion transport gene expressed specifically in the differentiated surface
epithelium of the colon (27), verified the differentiated
phenotype of clone 2. Kinetic studies have shown that the inhibition of
IL-8 gene expression corresponds temporally with the induction of DRA
mRNA expression (data not shown). Expression of the minigene was also
dramatically reduced in pooled Caco-2 transfectants, verifying that
silencing of IL-8 minigene expression in postconfluent cells occurs in
a copy number- and insertion site-independent fashion (Figs. 7
and 8
A). Also apparent in individual or pooled colonies of
Caco-2 cells transfected with the P1 minigene for IL-8 was the complete
absence of minigene expression in the unstimulated (basal) state (Fig. 7
, A and B). Furthermore, unlike the shorter IL-8
minigene constructs (Fig. 4
D) or the luciferase reporter
constructs (Fig. 4
D), aberrant basal expression of the P1
minigene could no longer be significantly enhanced by butyrate (Fig. 8
B) or trichostatin A (data not shown). This was true for
both individual and pooled colonies of the P1 minigene transfectants
(Fig. 8
B). Consistent with a histone deacetylase-independent
mechanism of silencing, inhibition of DNA methylation using
5-aza-2'deoxycytidine did not induce basal expression of either
endogenous IL-8 gene or a P1 minigene (Fig. 8
C). Therefore,
in summary, the P1(IL-8) minigene recapitulated endogenous IL-8 gene
silencing upon Caco-2 cell differentiation and in the basal
unstimulated state.
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| Discussion |
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In this report, we characterize a model system that reveals two
distinctly different mechanisms by which the IL-8 gene is
transcriptionally silenced, both of which require the presence of
cis-acting regions at a distance from the immediate IL-8
gene locus. Differentiation of Caco-2 cells inhibits IL-8 gene
transcription in response to immune stimulation with IL-1
. Treatment
of postconfluent Caco-2 cells with either sodium butyrate or
trichostatin A shows that histone deacetylation is required for this
repressive effect. Interestingly, none of the previously described
cis-acting elements of the IL-8 promoter play a role in this
effect (40). Differentiation of Caco-2 cells also
represses the expression of other immune response genes such as MCP-1.
Although a mechanism has been described that is responsible for the
transcriptional repression of this gene (11), it is
unlikely to be responsible for the effect observed in Caco-2 cells. In
contrast to our cell culture model, repression of MCP-1 transcription
as described by Sridhar et al. does not inhibit activation of the
endogenous MCP-1 gene in response to platelet-derived growth factor due
to a TTTTGTA heptad repeat.
Although further studies will be required to define the precise mechanism by which IL-8 gene transcription is silenced upon Caco-2 cell differentiation, several characteristics are similar to those observed in heterochromatic silencing. First, the silencing effect in postconfluent Caco-2 cells is dependent upon histone deacetylase activity. Second, the cis-acting regions required for silencing of the IL-8 gene are located some distance from the TATA box, >6.5 kb upstream and/or 3.7 kb downstream. This, of course, does not eliminate the possibility that a histone deacetylase activity associated with more classical transcriptional corepressors may be involved (48). However, long-range transcriptional silencing effects spanning many kilobases are certainly more consistent with heterochromatin-mediated effects (43). Finally, heterochromatic effects important for polycomb group-mediated silencing are critical for cellular differentiation during Drosophila development (52), and they are also perhaps important for cellular differentiation in postconfluent Caco-2 cells. The physiologic significance of proinflammatory cytokine gene silencing by chromatin-mediated effects remains to be determined. However, due to the central role that chromatin plays in all biological processes involving DNA, it has been suggested that alteration in chromatin structure may influence many fundamental biological processes, likely resulting in the development of specific diseases (56). In this regard, it is interesting that proteins involved in nucleosome remodeling and heterochromatin formation have been shown to be either mutated or the target of autoantibodies in specific malignant and autoimmune disease processes (57, 58).
The mechanism by which basal activity of IL-8 gene transcription is
silenced is distinctly different from the silencing observed in
postconfluent Caco-2 cells. First, basal silencing of the IL-8 gene can
be completely reversed by immune stimulation with IL-1
. Second, we
show that this basal transcriptional silencing is independent of
histone deacetylase activity. Previous studies have shown that NF-
B
mediates activation of transcription by reconfiguring chromatin
structure by nucleosomal alterations (59). Therefore, in
the absence of NF-
B activation by immune stimulation with IL-1
,
the IL-8 promoter remains in a basally repressed state and cannot be
activated by histone deacetylase inhibitors. Significant basal
transcriptional activity of cytokine promoter regions has been observed
with several promoters analyzed using reporter genes. For example,
high-level basal expression has been demonstrated for the
NF-
B-dependent gene MCP-1/JE in Rat-1 cells (9).
Interestingly, similar to the IL-8 promoter, binding of nuclear
proteins to an AP-1 element is essential for this basal expression.
High-level basal expression has also been described for the MIP-1
promoter in a macrophage cell line (8). These results
demonstrate that aberrant high-level basal expression of reporter gene
expression is a more generalized property that is not specific to
either the IL-8 promoter or Caco-2 cells.
In the absence of endogenous gene expression, our results suggest that
this aberrant transcriptional activity is an artifact of the reporter
systems used. This may be due to the absence of AT-rich regions in the
3' UTR required to destabilize mRNA, as has been demonstrated for the
TNF-
gene (12). In contrast, we demonstrate that the
significant basal activity observed with our IL-8 transgene construct,
which contains these AT-rich regions in the 3' UTR as well as the
polyadenylation signal, is due to aberrant transcriptional activation.
It is interesting that this aberrant basal activity can be augmented
dramatically by the use of histone deacetylase inhibitors while the
endogenous gene remains silent. However, upon immune activation,
expression of the endogenous gene is augmented in parallel with the
increased expression observed in the luciferase reporter or the
minigene constructs. This pattern of cytokine gene expression has also
been observed with the MIP-2 gene in a different cell line, IEC 6,
suggesting that silencing of basal transcriptional activity may be a
general mechanism that may regulate many immune response genes
(42).
The silencing of basal activity may be particularly relevant in the
large intestine, in which concentrations of butyrate normally range
from 20 to 40 mM due to the fermentation of undigested carbohydrates by
the colonic bacterial flora (60). In this regard, it is
interesting that basal activation of the IL-8 locus is present
primarily in the intestinal tract of transgenic animals (Fig. 5
, B and C). Additional investigation will be
necessary to determine the specific cell type responsible for this
aberrant activity. In turn, such studies may provide new insights into
tissue-restricted mechanisms by which chromatin structure may be
modified. Although basal activity of the IL-8 gene in transgenic
animals is easily detected by RT-PCR, the level of activity is
relatively low, similar to that observed in cell culture (Figs. 3
B and 4D). Nevertheless, the results in
transgenic animals provide two important insights. First, the results
are a proof of principle that the aberrant activity of the IL-8
promoter observed in cell culture has relevance in vivo. This
observation is supported by the presence of aberrant IL-8 mRNA
expression in two independent transgenic founder lines with different
insertion sites and copy numbers. Second, because the IL-8 transgene
does not contain any bacterial DNA, artifactual alterations in gene
expression caused by extraneous plasmid DNA are excluded. Indeed,
previous studies have shown that prokaryotic vector DNA can alter
transgene expression in vivo (61). Finally, because the
IL-8 locus used in the development of the transgenic animals did not
contain the HA tag used in the cell culture experiments, aberrant
activity due to modification of the IL-8 transgene can be excluded.
Although it is possible that recently described histone
deacetylase-independent mechanisms of transcriptional silencing may be
involved in repressing basal activity of the IL-8 gene (54, 55), the complete reversal of this silencing by immune
stimulation with IL-1
makes these mechanisms less plausible. It is
more likely that there are flanking boundary elements, such as
insulators, which silence basal IL-8 gene transcription induced by
interactions with euchromatic chromatin associated with heterologous
enhancing elements (46, 62). Therefore, insulators prevent
enhancers from promiscuously activating a neighboring gene locus. In
this model, either the IL-8 minigene constructs (E3.3(HA)/E1.8 or
Pst5.0(HA)/E1.8) or the luciferase reporter genes, which lack
insulating elements, would exhibit enhanced basal transcriptional
activity induced by heterologous enhancing elements in proximity to the
transgene insertion site. It would be predicted that the magnitude of
basal activity observed with either chromatin-integrated construct
should be insertion site-dependent. Indeed, although we observed basal
activity in all of the individual clones of Caco-2 cells permanently
transfected with either luciferase reporter genes or the IL-8 minigenes
(E3.3(HA)/E1.8 or Pst5.0(HA)/E1.8), there was a significant variation
in the magnitude of this basal activity (data not shown). In contrast,
the P1(IL-8) minigene, which presumably contains insulating elements
flanking the IL-8 gene locus, would not be aberrantly activated.
Insulators have been described for several genes to be associated with
gene clusters, such as globin genes, in which they may help to prevent
aberrant activation by positive regulatory elements associated with
adjacent genes (62). Recently, Bell et al. identified a
zinc finger DNA-binding protein, CTCF, that exhibits
enhancer-blocking activity when bound to vertebrate insulator elements
(62). The same insulating function may be necessary for
chemokine genes that are also located within gene clusters on
chromosomes 4 and 17 (63).
There has been much recent interest in mechanisms involving the silencing of gene transcription. Previous studies have carefully characterized elements within the IL-8 promoter that are critical for the regulation of IL-8 gene transcription (10, 40). Herein, we provide evidence that additional mechanisms, located at a distance from the immediate IL-8 locus, are critical for two distinctly different types of transcriptional silencing. It is likely that these mechanisms are not unique for IL-8 gene regulation but instead are important for the regulation of multiple chemokine genes. Further characterization of the mechanisms responsible for epigenetic silencing of chemokine gene transcription may provide important new insights into the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Gary D. Wu, Division of Gastroenterology, Pennsylvania School of Medicine, 600 Clinical Research Building, 415 Curie Boulevard, Philadelphia, PA 19104. E-mail address: gdwu{at}mail.med.upenn.edu ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: MCP-1, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1; UTR, untranslated region; HA, hemagglutinin; MIP, macrophage-inflammatory protein. ![]()
Received for publication January 11, 2001. Accepted for publication April 3, 2001.
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