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Article

FoxA1 Binding Directs Chromatin Structure and the Functional Response of a Glucocorticoid Receptor-Regulated Promoter

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Pages 5413-5425 | Received 23 Mar 2009, Accepted 08 Aug 2009, Published online: 21 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Reconstitution of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR)-regulated mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) promoter in Xenopus oocytes was used to monitor the effects of different transcription factor contexts. Three constitutively binding factors, nuclear factor 1 (NF1), octamer transcription factor 1 (Oct1), and the Forkhead box A1 (FoxA1), were shown to act in concert, to direct the chromatin structure, and to enhance the GR response. FoxA1 has a dominant effect in the absence of hormone and induces a cluster of DNase I-hypersensitive sites in the segment comprising bp −400 to +25. This FoxA1-mediated chromatin remodeling does not induce MMTV transcription, as opposed to that of the GR. However, the robust FoxA1-dependent chromatin opening has the following drastic functional consequences on the hormone regulation: (i) GR-DNA binding is facilitated, as revealed by dimethyl sulfate in vivo footprinting, leading to increased hormone-induced transcription, and (ii) the GR antagonist RU486 is converted into a partial agonist in the presence of FoxA1 via ligand-independent GR activation. We conclude that FoxA1 mediates a preset chromatin structure and directs a context-specific response of a nuclear receptor. Furthermore, the alternative nucleosome arrangement induced by GR and FoxA1 implies this to be determined by constitutive binding of transcription factors rather than by the DNA sequence itself.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We are grateful to Per-Henrik Holmqvist for providing the FoxA1 mRNA required for this work and to Sandro Rusconi for kindly providing the LBD-truncated GR expression vector pSTC3-556.

We thank the Swedish Cancer Foundation (grant 08 0535) and the Swedish Research Council—Medicine (grant K2008-66X) for financial support. C.Å. is sponsored by a postdoc fellowship from the Swedish Research Council—Medicine.

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