The transcription of human alpha 1(I) procollagen gene (COL1A1) is suppressed by tumour necrosis factor-alpha through proximal short promoter elements: evidence for suppression mechanisms mediated by two nuclear-factorbinding sites
- PMID: 8920984
- PMCID: PMC1217860
- DOI: 10.1042/bj3190811
The transcription of human alpha 1(I) procollagen gene (COL1A1) is suppressed by tumour necrosis factor-alpha through proximal short promoter elements: evidence for suppression mechanisms mediated by two nuclear-factorbinding sites
Abstract
Recent studies have demonstrated that tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) decreases alpha 1(I) procollagen gene (COL1A1) expression in cultured human dermal fibroblasts. The purpose of this study was to analyse the transcriptional control of COL1A1 by TNF-alpha. Cultured human dermal fibroblasts were transiently transfected with plasmids containing 5' flanking sequences of COL1A1 fused to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene, and were incubated for 48 h in medium with or without TNF-alpha. TNF-alpha inhibited the CAT activity of fibroblasts transfected with plasmids containing 2.3 kb of 5' flanking sequences of COL1A1, whereas the activity of control plasmids containing the herpes simplex thymidine kinase promoter gene (pBLCAT) was unaltered. A series of deletion constructs of various small substitution mutations of the COL1A1 5' flanking region fused to the CAT gene were also transfected, and CAT activity was measured after incubation with TNF-alpha. TNF-alpha suppressed COL1A1 promoter activity through proximal short promoter elements containing only 107 bp. Short substitution mutations between -101 and -97 bp or between -46 and -38 bp abolished TNF-alpha suppression of COL1A1 promoter activity. DNA-protein complex formation was observed involving both sites in gel retardation assays. These results suggest that TNF-alpha suppressed COL1A1 promoter activity through elements located between -101 and -97 bp and between -46 and -38 bp of the COL1A1 promoter, and that the suppression involved DNA-protein interactions.
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