D. Tara et al., AN ACTIVATION-RESPONSIVE ELEMENT IN THE MURINE IL-4 GENE IS THE SITE OF AN INDUCIBLE DNA-PROTEIN INTERACTION, The Journal of immunology, 151(7), 1993, pp. 3617-3626
IL-4 is a pleiotropic cytokine whose expression is limited to a subset
of activated T cells and cells of the basophil/mast cell lineage. It
plays a key role in regulating many immune responses; however, little
is known about the intracellular signaling events that lead to the sel
ective and transient IL-4 expression in either of these cell types. in
this study, the molecular basis of stimulation-dependent transcriptio
n in T cells was explored. To identify cis elements that regulate IL-4
gene transcription, various amounts of the 5' flanking region of the
murine IL-4 gene were linked to a chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (
CAT) reporter gene and tested for the ability to modulate CAT gene tra
nscription in PMA-stimulated EL-4 T cells. These experiments indicate
that multiple positive and negative-acting elements contribute to the
overall level of IL-4 transcription. These elements are located both p
roximal and distal to the transcription initiation site (TIS). An acti
vation responsive element is located within 87 bp of the IL-4 gene TIS
. This sequence is sufficient to confer responsiveness to PMA-mediated
signals and results in a 10- to 20-fold induction of CAT reporter gen
e activity compared to activity detected in unstimulated cells. Protei
ns that specifically bind sequences within this region (-88 to -60) ar
e detected in both unstimulated and stimulated EL-4 T cell nuclear ext
racts. An additional DNA-protein interaction is detected only when ext
racts from stimulated cells are analyzed. Base substitutions within th
e -88 to -60 sequence affect both transactivation function and protein
/DNA interactions and demonstrate that sequences between -78 and -69 b
p are critical. Together, these data support a model in which T cell a
ctivation signals stimulate binding of a nuclear protein(s) to a preex
isting IL-4 DNA-protein complex. Proteins detected in these promoter p
roximal DNA-protein complexes are likely to be key elements in facilit
ating stimulation-dependent IL-4 transcription.