M. Pontoglio et al., HEPATOCYTE NUCLEAR FACTOR 1-ALPHA GENE INACTIVATION IMPAIRS CHROMATINREMODELING AND DEMETHYLATION OF THE PHENYLALANINE-HYDROXYLASE GENE, Molecular and cellular biology, 17(9), 1997, pp. 4948-4956
Hepatocyte nuclear factor 1 alpha (HNF1 alpha) is a homeoprotein that
Is expressed in the liver, kidney, pancreas, and digestive tract, Its
inactivation ill mouse resulted in decreased transcription of known ta
rget genes such as albumin and alpha(1)-antitrypsin. In contrast, the
phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) gene was totally silent and unresponsi
ve to normal inducers like glucocorticoids and cyclic AMP in the liver
, DNase I and micrococcal nuclease digestion of liver nuclei showed th
at HNF1 alpha inactivation had drastic effects on the chromatin struct
ure of the PAH regulatory-regions. Three DNase I-hypersensitive sites
(HSSI, HSSII, and HSSIII), typical of the actively transcribed PAR gen
e, were undetectable in liver from HNF1 alpha-deficient animals, Both
HSSII and HSSIII elements harbor HNF1 sites, but only the Latter has d
etectable enhancer activity in transient-transfection assays, In addit
ion, the PAH promoter in livers of HNF1 alpha-deficient animals tias m
ethylated. These results suggest that HNF1 alpha could activate transc
ription through two mechanisms, One implies participation in the recru
itment of the general transcription machinery to the promoter, and the
second involves the remodeling of chromatin structure and demethylati
on that would allow transcription factors to interact with their cogna
te ris-acting elements.