## Abstract An important aspect of the cellular differentiation in the intestine is the migration of epithelial cells from the crypt to the villus tip. As homeodomaine transcription factor CDX2 has been suggested to influence cell migration, we performed a genomeβwide promoter analysis for CDX2 bin
FasL promoter activation by IL-2 through SP1 and NFAT but not Egr-2 and Egr-3
β Scribed by Sheng Xiao; Ken Matsui; Alan Fine; Bangmin Zhu; Ann Marshak-Rothstein; Russel L. Widom; Shyr-Te Ju
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 166 KB
- Volume
- 29
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0014-2980
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Recently activated peripheral T cells treated with IL-2 for 4 days expressed Fas ligand (FasL)-mediated cytotoxicity. These IL-2-treated T cells had high nuclear expression of SP1 and NFAT, but lacked the Egr-2 and Egr-3 that could be induced by anti-CD3 stimulation and had been implicated in FasL gene activation. A minimal promoter region that responded to IL-2 was identified by transient transfection assays using deletion mutants. The data suggests that the GGGCGGAAA site present in the 5' end of the minimal FasL promoter is critical to IL-2-induced FasL gene activation. The GGGCGGAAA sequence contains an overlapping site used by two transcription factor families, one (GGGCGG) for the SP1 family and the other (GGAAA) for the NFAT family. FasL promoter activity was partially but statistically significantly reduced with constructs mutated at either site. More activity was lost with a construct mutated at both sites. In contrast, mutation at the Egr site had no effect on IL-2induced FasL promoter activity. Our study identified a new FasL promoter site responding to IL-2-induced SP1 and NFAT factors. Furthermore, the nuclei of IL-2-treated cells express SP1 and NFAT, but not Egr-2 and Egr-3, for FasL gene activation.
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