Transcription Factors NF-Y and Sp1 Are Important Determinants of the Promoter Activity of the Bovine and Human Neuronal Nicotinic Receptor β4 Subunit Genes

2002 
Abstract The β4 subunit is a component of the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors which control catecholamine secretion in bovine adrenomedullary chromaffin cells. The promoter of the gene coding for this subunit was characterized. A proximal region (from −99 to −64) was responsible for the transcriptional activity observed in chromaffin, C2C12, and COS cells. Within this region twocis-acting elements that bind transcription factors Sp1 and NF-Y were identified. Mutagenesis of the two elements indicated that they cooperate for the basal transcription activity of the promoter. The human β4 promoter, that was also characterized, shared structural and functional homologies with the bovine promoter. Thus, two adjacent binding elements for Sp1 and NF-Y were detected. Whereas the Sp1 site was an important determinant of the promoter activity, the NF-Y site may have cell-specific effects. Given that these promoters showed no structural or functional homology with the previously characterized rat β4 subunit promoter (Bigger, C. B., Casanova, E. A., and Gardner, P. D. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 32842–32848) except for the involvement of an Sp1 binding element, we propose that constitutive expression of the β4 subunit gene in these three close species may be controlled by the general transcription factor Sp1. Nevertheless, other components could determine species-specific β4 subunit expression.
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