The Journal of Immunology, 2002, 168: 2857-2864.
Copyright © 2002 by The American Association of Immunologists
The Pmed1 Gene Promoter of Human Fc
RIIIA Can Function as a NK/T Cell-Specific Restriction Element, Which Involves Binding of Sp1 Transcription Factor1
Frank Heusohn,
Gundula Wirries,
Reinhold E. Schmidt and
J. Engelbert Gessner2
Department of Clinical Immunology, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany
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Abstract
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The low-affinity receptor for IgG (human Fc
RIIIA) is selectively
expressed by a subset of T lymphocytes, NK cells, and macrophages. To
understand the mechanisms underlying this pattern of cell type-specific
expression, we initially identified alternative promoters, Pmed1/2 and
Pprox, in the 5' end of the Fc
RIIIA gene. In this study, we
focused on the Pmed1 promoter and demonstrated this 93-bp region to be
highly specific in governing restriction to NK/T cell lines. This
property of Pmed1 is context independent and can extend to a disparate
promoter. Deletion analysis defined a contribution of two separate
elements located to the 5' 21-bp (-942/-922) and 3' 72-bp
(-921/-850) regions of Pmed1 in conferring NK/T cell specificity. The
5' part of Pmed1 contains binding sites for Sp1 and NK
element-recognizing factors and substitution mapping studies revealed a
critical requirement of the Sp1-I site. The importance of Sp1
protein to regulate maximal Pmed1 promoter activity was further
established by EMSAs and cotransfection experiments in Sp1-null
Drosophila SL2 cells. Our data suggest that Sp1 can
contribute, in part, to NK/T cell restriction and further indicate that
the Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 sequence might be useful to direct the NK/T
cell-specific expression of heterologous genes.
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Introduction
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Natural
killer lymphocytes are important effector cells in natural immunity and
play a major role in the killing of certain tumor cells and virally
infected cells that lack some or all MHC class I molecules on their
surface (1, 2, 3). This mode of NK cell reactivity has been
termed missing self-recognition, and it is now well accepted that the
lysis of MHC-I-deficient cells is based on the failure of NK cells to
receive an inhibitory signal via MHC receptors such as mouse Ly49 or
human KIR family receptors (4, 5, 6).
Very little is known about the molecular events that regulate
differentiation and gene expression in NK cells. In the mouse, there
are few reports on the transcriptional regulation of NK cell-specific
genes encoding allotype MHC-specific NK cell receptors, Ly49A and 2B4
(7, 8), and perforin (9, 10, 11). Binding of the
transcription factor TCF-1 to two sites in the Ly49A promoter is
critical to regulate gene activity and to direct clonal acquisition of
the Ly49A receptor during NK cell development (7). Sp1-and
Ets-related transcription factors constitute a minimal promoter region
responsible for NK- and CTL-specific expression of perforin
(11). A killer cell-specific Ets-related factor, termed
NF-P2, has been observed to interact with a 5' upstream NK enhancer
(NKE)3 motif of the
perforin gene (9). In addition to the MHC-specific
receptors and perforin, mouse NK cells are characterized by the
expression of low-affinity FcRs, Fc
RIII, through which they bind IgG
and exert Ab-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (12, 13). High levels of Fc
RIII are found on early fetal
thymocytes containing progenitor cells of NK and T cells suggesting
regulated Fc
RIII expression during murine NK cell development
(14).
Previous studies in humans show mutually exclusive expression of
distinct Fc
RIII isoforms that are encoded by the two homologous
genes, Fc
RIIIA and Fc
RIIIB (15). The transmembrane
Fc
RIIIA isoform is present on macrophages, 
T lymphocytes, and
NK cells, whereas Fc
RIIIB is a GPI-anchored protein that is mainly
expressed on granulocytes (13, 16, 17, 18, 19). Reconstitution
studies of the different Fc
RIII cell type specificities in
transgenic mice suggest the 5' end of each gene to be involved in
macrophage and NK/T cell vs granulocyte restriction (20).
Reporter gene assays confirm that the first 0.2 kb of 5' Fc
RIIIA/B
sequences, the Pprox promoter regions (-198/-10), target gene
expression to their respective cell types (21, 22).
Interestingly, expression of Fc
RIIIA in NK and 
T
cells, but not macrophages can also occur via Pprox-independent
transcript initiation. Functional analyses of the Fc
RIIIA gene
identify alternative promoters, termed Pmed1 (-942/-850) and Pmed2
(-1376/-1123), demonstrated to be active in the NK-like YT cell line
(23). The nucleotide sequence of Pmed1/2 differ at minor
positions to their corresponding regions of the Fc
RIIIB gene and
these changes may determine that the transmembrane Fc
RIIIA but not
the GPI-linked Fc
RIIIB receptor isoform is expressed in NK/T
cells.
In the present study, we examined the capacity of Pmed1, in comparison
to Pprox, to regulate Fc
RIIIA expression in macrophages and/or NK/T
cells by using transient transfections and reporter gene assays of
different cell types. Moreover, we investigated the contribution of
transcription factor binding to Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 in cell type-specific
transcriptional initiation. By using this strategy, we showed that
Pmed1 represents a highly active and NK/T cell-specific promoter. Sp1
is one of the factors required for maximal Pmed1 promoter activity that
contributes, in part, to NK/T cell-specific expression. Importantly,
Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 sequences can confer NK/T cell restriction at a
disparate promoter. Analysis of this unique property should result in
the development of new DNA-based vectors for targeting expression of
heterologous genes specifically to NK/T cells.
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Materials and Methods
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Reporter plasmid constructions
Subcloning of the Pprox (-198/-10), Pmed1 (-942/-850), and
Pmed1
21bp (-921/-850) promoter fragments of the Fc
RIIIA gene
into the BamHI/BglII sites of the basic
promoterless luciferase expression vector pLuc was described previously
(21, 22, 23). For the experiments with heterologous promoters,
the Pmed1 and Pmed1
21bp fragments as well as three copies of the 5'
21-bp (-942/-921) part were cloned in inverse orientation upstream to
the minimal TATA box element of the thymidine kinase (TK) promoter into
the pTATA luciferase plasmid. Relevant hybrid constructs from the
corresponding Fc
RIIIB gene region were similarly generated. Deletion
and substitution mutants of the 21-bp 5' part in Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 were
prepared from the -942/-850 Fc
RIIIA gene region by a PCR-based
approach using modified oligonucleotides containing BamHI
restriction sites for subcloning into pLuc. A similar strategy was used
to construct the mutations of the different Sp1 consensus binding sites
in the Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 luciferase clone. All subclones containing
inserts were sequenced to confirm the presence of the deletion or
mutation. Large-scale plasmid preparations were made either by two
rounds of centrifugation in cesium chloride/ethidium bromide gradients
or by a purification kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA) for all reporter gene
constructs, divided into aliquots, and stored at -20 to -80°C until
used in transfection assays.
Tissue culture, transient transfections, and luciferase
assay
YT (human cell line with NK-like characteristics
(24)) cells were maintained in Iscoves medium (Biochrom,
Berlin, Germany) containing 15% FCS and supplements. U937 (human
histiocytic lymphoma cell line) and Jurkat (human T cell leukemia cell
line) cells were maintained in RPMI 1640 medium containing 10% FCS and
supplements. RAW264.7 (mouse monocyte-macrophage cell line) cells were
grown as monolayer culture in RPMI 1640 medium containing 10% FCS, 0.1
mmol/L 2-ME, and supplements. In some experiments, HL-60 cells were
induced to express Fc
RIIIB during differentiation to neutrophils
upon treatment with 1.2% DMSO (21).
For transient transfection experiments,
12 x
107 cells were electroporated with 2040 µg of
the various reporter plasmids using an Eurogentec gene pulser
Eurogentec, Brussels, Belgium). To monitor transfection efficiency, 2
µg of the internal pCMV
gal plasmid (a gift from B. Lüscher,
Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany) was used. Transiently
transfected cells were incubated in growth medium at 37°C in 5%
CO2 for 20 h. Cells were harvested, washed
twice with PBS, and analyzed for luciferase activity with an assay kit
(Promega, Madison, WI) according to the manufacturers instructions.
Luminescence was detected by using a Berthold Lumat LB 9501 (Berthold,
Nashua, NH) and luciferase expression levels were normalized to the
levels of
-galactosidase.
Sp1-null Drosophila SL2 cells (ATCC CRL-1963) were grown in
Schneider medium (Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY) at 25°C as
described previously (25, 26). Briefly, 5 x
106 SL2 cells were electroporated at 270 V and
1500 µF with 40 µg of reporter plasmids and 5 µg of effector
plasmid pPac-Sp1 (containing full-length Sp1 cDNA in the pPAC
expression vector; kindly provided by R. Tjian, Berkeley, CA
(27)). Luciferase activity was examined 24 h after
transfection.
Preparation of nuclear extracts
Nuclear extracts were prepared according to a
modified protocol by Dignam, allowing rapid isolation of nuclear
proteins (28). Briefly, 1 x
107 cells were washed twice in ice-cold PBS and
once in buffer A containing 10 mmol/L HEPES (pH 7.8), 1.5 mmol/L
MgCl2, 10 mmol/L NaCl, 0.2 mmol/L EDTA, 0.5
mmol/L DTT, 0.5 mmol/L PMSF, and a mixture of proteinase inhibitors,
including leupeptin (0.1 µg), aprotinin (1 µg), pepstatin A (1.5
µg), and soybean trypsin inhibitor (1 µg). Cells were swollen by 10
min of incubation on ice and nuclei were recovered by centrifugation at
4°C for 3 min at 13.000 x g. The nuclei were then
lysed for 30 min in high salt buffer C (20 mmol/L HEPES (pH 7.8), 25%
glycerol, 420 mmol/L NaCl, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM
EDTA, and the same proteinase mixture as used in buffer A), and nuclear
extracts were obtained by centrifugation at 4°C for 5 min. Total
protein concentration in the nuclear extract preparations was measured
by using a Bio-Rad kit (Hercules, CA). Most preparations contained
1.53 µg/µl protein, and these protein extracts were frozen
immediately and stored at -80°C until used.
EMSAs
Complementary oligonucleotides were annealed and 5' end-labeled
using [
-32P]ATP (3000 Ci/mmol; Amersham
Biosciences, Braunschweig, Germany) and T4 polynucleotide kinase (MBI
Fermentas, Vilnius, Lithuania). Radiolabeled double-stranded
oligonucleotides were purified from unincorporated ATP by passage
through a Sephadex G-25 spin column and stored at -20°C until
used.
EMSAs were performed by incubating 3 µg extracted nuclear proteins
with 10,000 cpm of double-stranded oligonucleotides in a total volume
of 20 µl reaction mixture containing 50 mmol/L Tris-HCl buffer (pH
7.4), 250 mmol/L NaCl, 10 mmol/L DTT, 10 mmol/L PMSF, 25% glycerol,
and 5% skim milk powder at 20°C for 30 min. For competition
analysis, a 100-fold molar excess of unlabeled double-stranded
oligonucleotides was preincubated with nuclear extracts. For the Sp1
shift experiment, a polyclonal Sp1 Ab preparation (Santa Cruz
Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA) was incubated with nuclear extracts for
15 min after the addition of radiolabeled probe. The binding reactions
were loaded on a 4% nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel containing 0.5x
Tris-borate-EDTA buffer and electrophoresed at 200 V. Gels were
exposed and analyzed by a phosphor imager (Fuji-Raytest, Straubenhardt,
Germany).
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Results
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Transient transfection of Fc
RIIIA Pprox and Pmed1 promoter
plasmids in different cell types
The previous analysis on the regulation of Fc
RIIIA expression
in NK and 
T cells had identified distinct a1, a2/3, and a5/6
transcript classes differing by their 5' untranslated (UT)
sequences but encoding the same Fc
RIIIA receptor protein
(23). As outlined in Fig. 1
, the mRNA start sites had been mapped to distinct promoter regions,
namely, the Pprox (located from position -198 to -10 of the ATG
translation start codon) for a1, Pmed1 (-942/-850) for a2/3, and
Pmed2 (-1376/-1123) for a5/6. In contrast, Fc
RIIIA expression in
macrophages had been shown to utilize Fc
RIIIAa1 transcript
initiation only (21, 23), suggesting different regulatory
capacities of the Pprox and Pmed1/2 promoters in directing Fc
RIIIA
expression to either macrophages and/or NK/T cells, respectively.

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FIGURE 1. Organization of the Fc RIIIA 5' transcriptional control region.
Fc RIIIA exons of the distinct 5' untranslated regions (5UT1, 5UT2),
the signal peptide (S1, S2), and the first extracellular Ig-like domain
(EC1) are shown as boxes. Important cis-active elements
(E, enhancer; S, silencer; P, promoter) are indicated. The position of
alternative promoters Pprox (-198/-10), Pmed1 (-942/-850), and
Pmed2 (-1376/-1123) associated with transcript initiation of
Fc RIIIa1, a2/3, or a5/6 mRNA are shown below the Fc RIIIA gene as
the distance to the ATG translational start codon (+1).
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To test this hypothesis, the Fc
RIIIA Pprox and Pmed1 promoter
fragments cloned 5' to the luciferase reporter gene were transiently
transfected into various cell types. Transfected cells were harvested
20 h after transfection and luciferase activity was measured. As
shown in Fig. 2
, the highest level of
luciferase activity was found for the Pmed1 plasmid in the immature NK
cell line YT set as 100% (activity measured in relative light units
(RLU) was in the range of 90,000125,000 RLU). A reduced level of
40% luciferase activity was also detected for Pmed1 Luc in Jurkat T
cells but not in U937.1 and RAW267 cell lines. The Pprox promoter
plasmid showed substantial luciferase activities of 4050% in YT NK
and Jurkat T cells, as well as of 2030% in monocytic-macrophage
U937.1 and RAW267 cells. These results are in good agreement with the
previous Fc
RIIIA transcript analysis (23) and show that
the Pmed1 is a highly active promoter directing NK/T cell-specific
expression. In addition, the data on the broader specificity of Pprox
are similar to those observed for the entire -1817/-10 Fc
RIIIA
promoter sequences (Ref. 21 and data not shown),
indicating Pprox but not Pmed1 to be responsible for the additional
regulation of Fc
RIIIA expression in macrophages. In our subsequent
analysis, we focused mainly on the NK/T cell-specific activity of
Pmed1.
The Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 sequence contains binding sites for Sp1 and
NKE-recognizing factors and is capable of conferring NK/T cell
specificity on a TATA box
We first investigated whether Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 could control NK/T
cell-specific expression in the context of a heterologous promoter.
Hereby, the 92-bp Pmed1 DNA fragment was cloned in inverse orientation
upstream to the minimal TATA box promoter element of the
TK gene in the pTATA vector. Cloning of the 92-bp sequence
in inverse orientation to the promoterless pLuc served as control
plasmid. When transfected into different cells, the pTATA/Pmed1-inv
construct but not the pTATA and pPmed1-inv plasmids achieved high
levels of specific expression in YT and Jurkat cell lines (Fig. 3
), indicating that the 92-bp Pmed1
segment is capable of conferring NK/T cell-specificity on a disparate
promoter.

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FIGURE 3. Fc RIIIA Pmed1 is sufficient for NK/T cell induction of a
heterologous promoter. The structure of the reporter plasmidspTATA,
pPmed1, pPmed-inv, and pTATA/Pmed1-invare shown
(left). These constructs were transfected in YT, Jurkat,
U937.1, and RAW267 cells, and resultant luciferase activities expressed
as RLU from a representative experiment are shown
(right).
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Because the 92-bp Pmed1 is a NK/T cell-specific promoter, we examined
more closely the sequence for potential binding sites of known
transcription factors. Three consensus binding sites for Sp1 (I, II,
III) and a NKE motif were found (Fig. 4
A). To demonstrate binding of
the Sp1 and NKE-recognizing factors to these sites, we performed EMSA
analysis using five consecutive and overlapping 30-mer base pair
segments of the Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 promoter fragment, termed OL1 to OL5.
Nuclear extracts from the YT cell line were used as a source of nuclear
proteins. As shown in Fig. 4
B, three main complexes were
formed between the OL1 and OL5 probes and YT-derived nuclear proteins.
Complex I was seen with OL1, OL2, and OL5 containing the
Sp1-I/II/III sites; complex II consisted of two bands and occurred with
OL1 containing the NKE motif (a similar EMSA profile had been
previously described by Koizumi et al. (9) for the NKE
sequence of the mouse perforin gene); complex III formed a broad smear
with OL4 which contains the region of the a2/3 mRNA initiation
sites (22, 23), thus suggesting an interaction of the RNA
polymerase II containing transcription initiation complex.
Binding of Sp1 to the 5' end Sp1-I site is critical for maximal
Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 activity as indicated by mutagenesis, EMSA, and
cotransfection experiments
After establishing the importance of the Fc
RIIIA Pmed1
region to regulate NK/T cell-specific expression in a
context-independent manner, we addressed the question which of the
identified cis-acting sequences (Sp1-I/II/III and NKE) are
responsible for promoter activity and/or cell type specificity. A 5'
deletion by 21 bp of the -942 to -850 Pmed1 sequence with the
(-921/-850) Pmed1
21bp Luc plasmid had been previously shown to
lead to an almost complete abrogation of promoter activity
(23). To define the relative contribution of the Sp1-I
(position -937 to -928) and NKE (position -930 to -922) binding
motifs within the 21-bp 5' end region, we first generated
Sp1-I and
NKE promoter mutants. As shown in Fig. 5
A, deletion of the
-942/-931 sequences in the Pmed1
Sp1-I Luc plasmid resulted in a
strong decrease of activity down to 20% RLU in both YT and Jurkat
cells. In contrast, deletion of the -927/-922 sequences in the Pmed1
NKE reporter construct showed only moderate effects with residual
activities of 4050% RLU in YT cells and 8085% in Jurkat cells.
These data indicate a prominent role of the Sp1-I recognition site,
while the NKE motif appears to be more dispensable.

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FIGURE 5. Mutation analysis of the 21-bp 5' end region of the Fc RIIIA Pmed1
demonstrates functional binding of Sp1 to the Sp1-I site in the
regulation of maximal promoter activity. A and
B, Constructs with the indicated changes (inv21),
deletions ( 21bp, Sp1-I, and NKE) and mutations (M1, M2, M3,
M4, M5) were transfected into YT and Jurkat cells. Representative
luciferase activities relative to the Pmed1 plasmid set as 100% for
each cell type are shown. C, Left panel: changed
sequences of triple-base mutated oligonucleotides (M1M5 as compared
with WT) used in the direct binding or competition assays. The location
of the putative Sp1-I binding site is shown. Right
panel: EMSA was performed with nuclear extracts from YT cells.
The binding reaction mixtures contained 32P-end-labeled DNA
probes (WT or M1M5), and a 100-fold molar excess of competitors as
indicated. Functional binding of Sp1 was examined by pretreatment with
an anti-Sp1 polyclonal Ab.
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Similar results were obtained in a second set of reporter gene assays
using the five consecutive substitution mutants Pmed1-M1 (-939/-937;
AAC changed into CCA), Pmed1-M2 (-936/-934; CCT changed into AAG),
Pmed1-M3 (-933/-931; CCC changed into TTT), Pmed1-M4 (-930/-928;
ACT changed into CTC), and Pmed1-M5 (-927/-925; TCC changed into
AGT). The triplet-base pair exchanges in M1 and M5 were of minor
importance, whereas major effects were obtained with the M2 to M4 Pmed1
mutant constructs resulting in strongly decreased promoter activity in
YT and Jurkat cells (Fig. 5
B). This correlated with the
disappearance of a dominant retarded band in EMSA analysis when using
YT nuclear proteins and M2- to M4-labeled DNA sequences (Fig. 5
C). Moreover, the same DNA-protein complex was specifically
eliminated either after preincubation with a polyclonal anti-Sp1 Ab
or competitively by the addition of a 100-fold molar excess of
unlabeled wild-type (WT), M1, and M5 but not M2 to M4 probes
(Fig. 5
C).
To confirm the specificity of Sp1 binding to the Sp1-I site within the
21-bp 5' end of Fc
RIIIA Pmed1, we also performed cotransfection
experiments of Sp1-deficient SL2 Drosophila Schneider cells
using an Sp1 expression vector (pPac-Sp1) and three copies
of the 21-bp (-942/-922) region fused in both
orientationsupstream to the TK gene promoter. The results
shown in Fig. 6
indicate that
cotransfection of 3 x 21bp-TK-Luc and 3 x 21bpinv-TK-Luc
plasmids with pPac-Sp1 in SL2 cells resulted in an
19-fold increase
of luciferase activity, thus providing evidence for functional binding
of Sp1 to the Sp1-I recognition site of Fc
RIIIA Pmed1. Similar
results were obtained when using cotransfection of Pmed1-Luc with
pPac-Sp1 (data not shown).

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FIGURE 6. Sp1 binding to the 5' Sp1-I site regulates transcriptional
initiation at a heterologous promoter in Drosophila SL2
cells upon cotransfection with an Sp1 expression plasmid. Sp1-negative
Drosophila SL2 cells were transiently cotransfected with
pTKLuc and pTKLuc containing three copies of the Sp1-I regulatory
sequence of the 21-bp 5' end of Fc RIIIA Pmed1 either in sense or
antisense orientation, with or without an expression plasmid for Sp1
(pPAC-Sp1). Cells were harvested 24 h after transfection and
reporter gene activity was assessed. Results are expressed as
severalfold induction of luciferase activity through pPAC-Sp1. One
representative experiment of four performed in triplicate is shown.
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Both the 5' Sp1-I site and the inactive 71-bp 3' region contribute
to the NK/T cell specificity of Fc
RIIIA Pmed1
The results of the mutagenesis, EMSA, and cotransfection studies
show the importance of the Sp1 transcription factor to interact with
its cognate Sp1-I sequence in the regulation of maximal Fc
RIIIA
Pmed1 promoter activity. To further characterize the role of the Sp1-I
site in cell-type specificity, a heterologous promoter construct,
pTATA/Pmed1
21bp-inv, was made in which the 5' 21-bp region
containing the Sp1-I site was deleted from Pmed1 inversely fused to the
TATA element of the TK gene linked to the luciferase
reporter. There was reduced expression of pTATA/Pmed1
21bp-inv when
transfected into either YT or Jurkat cells (Fig. 7
), confirming that Sp1-I contributes to
NK/T cell restriction.
On the other hand, expression was not completely abolished in the
deletion mutant, which indicates that elements of the almost inactive
71-bp 3' end (-921/-850) of Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 also serve to control
NK/T cell-specific expression. To test this, a second heterologous
promoter construct was generated using a similar deletion fragment
(-925/-846), but derived from the Fc
RIIIB gene. Consistent with
previous findings, the Pmed1 DNA fragment of Fc
RIIIB specifically
induced luciferase expression in HL-60 cells upon 1.2% DMSO treatment,
but was inactive in NK/T cells (Ref. 23 and data not
shown). Sequence comparison between Pmed1 of Fc
RIIIA and Fc
RIIIB
revealed identical Sp1-II/III sites, but differences in an 8-bp motif
(5'-GGAGCCCT-3'; located around the start site of transcription) which
is repeated 3-fold in Fc
RIIIB and affected in Fc
RIIIA by a C to T
exchange in the second repeat and lack of the third repeat (Fig. 7
A). When transfected into YT and Jurkat cells, pTATA
expression was
10-fold induced by the Pmed1
21bp-inv fragment of
Fc
RIIIA, but not Fc
RIIIB (Fig. 7
B). These results
suggest that, in addition to the 5' Sp1-I region, the 3' part of
Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 is involved in NK/T cell restriction.
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Discussion
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NK cells play an important role in innate immunity and tumor
defense mechanisms (1, 2, 3). They are regulated by opposing
signals from distinct receptor systems that either induce or inhibit NK
activity (4, 5, 6). In addition, activation of NK cells can
occur via Fc
Rs, leading to ADCC (12, 13). The most
important Fc
R on human NK cells is the transmembrane Fc
RIIIA
isoform. Fc
RIIIA expression on NK cells, 
T cells, and
macrophages is under the control of separate promoters, including Pprox
and Pmed1/2 (see Fig. 1
). The Pprox of Fc
RIIIA contains a
PU.1/Spi1 recognition site, the PU box, conserved among
several Fc
R genes, including Fc
RI (29), Fc
RIIA
(30), and Fc
RIII (31). PU.1 is expressed
in myeloid cell lines (32) and can interact with the PU
box of the human Fc
RIIIA Pprox promoter (21), a finding
that is consistent with Pprox-driven reporter gene expression in U937.1
and RAW267 cells (see Fig. 2
). PU.1 also determines the
myeloid-specific activity of the murine Fc
RIIIA promoter
(31). Together, these results may indicate that similar
mechanisms are operative in the transcriptional control of
macrophage-specific Fc
RIIIA expression in both mice and humans. In
contrast, however, human but not mouse Fc
RIIIA genes use Pmed1/2 as
alternative control regions for NK/T cell-specific expression
(23, 31). In this study, we thus focused mainly on the
Pmed1 region. This region possesses a minimal structure of 93 bp with a
5' NKE-like motif and three Sp1-I/II/III recognition sites and confers
activity on the luciferase reporter gene exclusively in YT (NK) and
Jurkat (T) cell lines (see Figs. 2
and 3
). EMSA studies using NK cell
extracts demonstrate that all of the Sp1-I/II/III sites and the NKE
sequence participate in the binding by nuclear factors (see Fig. 4
).
Previous results indicate a functional interaction of Ets-related
proteins, NF-P1/2, with the NKE element of the mouse perforin gene and
NKE multimers can enhance reporter gene expression driven by the
minimal perforin promoter in killer cells (9). However,
our initial attempts to demonstrate a similar capacity of the NKE-like
motif of Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 were not successful, since three copies of
NKE sequences cloned upstream of the heterologous TK promoter do not
induce reporter gene activity in a NK cell-specific manner (data not
shown). Moreover, deletion of the NKE-like sequence has a minor effect
on Pmed1 activity (see Fig. 5
). This may suggest that NKE is not the
major regulatory element in the Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 promoter. Competition,
supershift, and cotransfection studies now proved that the Sp1
transcription factor can interact with Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 and mutations
of either Sp1-I or Sp1-III sites abolish promoter function (see Figs. 5
and 6
). It is well established that self-association of Sp1 and
subsequent DNA bending or looping between adjacent DNA-Sp1 activation
sites is one of the general mechanisms of transcription initiation
(33, 34). Since the two Sp1-I and Sp1-III sites of
Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 are located upstream and downstream of the major
transcription start site, it might be possible that optimal Pmed1
activity requires such an interaction between Sp1 binding to promote
transcription.
An important feature of the human Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 control region is
its ability to extend NK/T cell restriction at a heterologous promoter
(see Figs. 3
and 7
). Two different regions of Pmed1 are required for
this gene context-independent specificity, one of which is
located to the 21-bp 5' end containing the Sp1-I site, which may
indicate a contribution of Sp1. In the absence of the 21-bp 5' region,
the remaining 72-bp 3' part of Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 displays no substantial
promoter activity (see Fig. 5
), while retaining a residual capacity to
confer NK/T cell restriction at a TATA box element (see Fig. 7
).
Importantly, the natural insertion of an 8-bp repeat element in the 3'
end subregion of the related Fc
RIIIB Pmed1 completely inactivates
this type of specificity (see Fig. 7
). The functional differences of
NK/T cell restriction thus seem to directly correlate with the
structural differences in the two Fc
RIII Pmed1 promoters and help to
explain why Fc
RIIIA but not Fc
RIIIB is expressed in 
T
cells and NK cells (23).
In summary, we showed that the two alternative Pprox and Pmed1
promoters of Fc
RIIIA have different specificities, with Pprox
regulating expression in both macrophages and NK cells, while Pmed1 is
uniquely active in NK/T cells. Moreover, the results presented here
provide the first evidence that the Pmed1 control region of human
Fc
RIIIA can function as a context independent NK/T cell restriction
element in vitro. This specificity is determined, in part, by binding
of Sp1 and also involves a second component located to the inactive 3'
part of Pmed1. Nucleotide changes in this latter region which result in
abrogated NK/T cell specificity are found in the Fc
RIIIB gene and
may account for the observed mutual exclusive expression of Fc
RIIIA
but not Fc
RIIIB in 
T and NK cells. Our findings also imply for
the potential use of Fc
RIIIA Pmed1 sequences to direct experimental
NK/T cell-specific expression of heterologous genes. To test for this
possibility, an in vivo-transgenic approach is required and currently
under investigation. Targeting specific expression of candidate genes
will certainly provide novel insights on the molecular events leading
to the differentiation and development of NK/T cells and, in addition,
may help to modify NK cell-mediated effects important in bone marrow
transplantation and the treatment of cancers (35, 36).
 |
Acknowledgments
|
|---|
We thank B. Lüscher and R. Tjian for providing plasmids and
members of our laboratory for helpful comments on this manuscript.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
1 This work was supported in part by Grant Ge892/4-2 of the Deutsche Forschungs-gemeinschaft. 
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. J. Engelbert Gessner, Abteilung für Klinische Immunologie, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, Carl-Neuberg-Strasse 1, 30625 Hannover, Germany. E-mail address: Gessner.Johannes{at}MH-Hannover.de 
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: NKE, NK element; Pprox, proximal promoter region of Fc
RIII genes; Pmed1, medial promoter 1 region of Fc
RIII genes; RLU, relative light units; SL2, Drosophila Schneider line 2 cells; TK, thymidine kinase; WT, wild type. 
Received for publication November 14, 2001.
Accepted for publication January 16, 2002.
 |
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