Divergent homeobox gene hex regulates promoter of the Na(+)-dependent bile acid cotransporter
- PMID: 10915644
- DOI: 10.1152/ajpgi.2000.279.2.G347
Divergent homeobox gene hex regulates promoter of the Na(+)-dependent bile acid cotransporter
Abstract
The divergent homeobox gene Hex is expressed in both developing and mature liver. A putative Hex binding site was identified in the promoter region of the liver-specific Na(+)-bile acid cotransporter gene (ntcp), and we hypothesized that Hex regulates the ntcp promoter through this site. Successive 5'-deletions of the ntcp promoter in a luciferase reporter construct transfected into Hep G2 cells confirmed a Hex response element (HRE) within the ntcp promoter (nt -733/-714). Moreover, p-CMHex transactivated a heterologous promoter construct containing HRE multimers (p4xHRELUC), whereas a 5-bp mutation of the core HRE eliminated transactivation. A dominant negative form of Hex (p-Hex-DN) suppressed basal luciferase activity of p-4xHRELUC and inhibited activation of this construct by p-CMHex. Interestingly, p-CMHex transactivated the HRE in Hep G2 cells but not in fibroblast-derived COS cells, suggesting the possibility that Hex protein requires an additional liver cell-specific factor(s) for full activity. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays confirmed that liver and Hep G2 cells contain a specific nuclear protein that binds the native HRE. We have demonstrated that the liver-specific ntcp gene promoter is the first known target of Hex and is a useful tool for evaluating function of the Hex protein.
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