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Research Article

Glucocorticoids and Protein Kinase A Coordinately Modulate Transcription Factor Recruitment at a Glucocorticoid-Responsive Unit

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Pages 5346-5354 | Received 21 Apr 1995, Accepted 14 Jul 1995, Published online: 30 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

The rat tyrosine aminotransferase gene is a model system to study transcriptional regulation by glucocor-ticoid hormones. We analyzed transcription factor binding to the tyrosine aminotransferase gene glucocorti-coid-responsive unit (GRU) at kb 22.5, using in vivo footprinting studies with both dimethyl sulfate and DNase I. At this GRU, glucocorticoid activation triggers a disruption of the nucleosomal structure. We show here that various regulatory pathways affect transcription factor binding to this GRU. The binding differs in two closely related glucocorticoid-responsive hepatoma cell lines. In line H4II, glucocorticoid induction promotes the recruitment of hepatocyte nuclear factor 3 (HNF3), presumably through the nucleosomal disruption. However, the footprint of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) is not visible, even though a regular but transient interaction of the GR is necessary to maintain HNF3 binding. In contrast, in line FTO2B, HNF3 binds to the GRU in the absence of glucocorticoids and nucleosomal disruption, showing that a ‘‘closed’’ chromatin conformation does not repress the binding of certain transcription factors in a uniform manner. In FTO2B cells, the footprint of the GR is detectable, but this requires the activation of protein kinase A. In addition, protein kinase A stimulation also improves the recruitment of HNF3 independently of glucocorticoids and enhances the glu-cocorticoid response mediated by this GRU in an HNF3-dependent manner. In conclusion, the differences in the behavior of this regulatory sequence in the two cell lines show that various regulatory pathways are integrated at this GRU through modulation of interrelated events: transcription factor binding to DNA and nucleosomal disruption.

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