Separate cis-acting DNA elements control cell type- and tissue-specific expression of collagen binding molecular chaperone HSP47

  • Hiromi Hirata
  • , Isao Yamamura
  • , Kunihiko Yasuda
  • , Akio Kobayashi
  • , Norihiro Tada
  • , Misao Suzuki
  • , Kazunori Hirayoshi
  • , Nobuko Hosokawa
  • , Kazuhiro Nagata

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Scopus citations

Abstract

HSP47 is a collagen-binding heat shock protein and is assumed to act as a molecular chaperone in the biosynthesis and secretion of procollagen. As the synthesis of HSP47 is closely correlated with that of collagen in various cell lines and tissues, we performed a promoter/reporter assay using HSP47- producing and nonproducing cells. 280 base pairs (bp(s)) of upstream promoter were shown to be necessary for the basal expression but not to be enough for the cell type-specific expression. When the first and the second introns were introduced downstream of this 280-bp region, marked up-regulation of the reporter activity was observed in HSP47-producing cells but not in nonproducing cells. This was confirmed in transgenic mice by staining the lacZ gene product under the control of the 280-bp upstream promoter and the introns. Staining was observed in skin, chondrocytes, precursor of bone, and other HSP47/collagen-producing tissues. A putative Sp1-binding site at -210 bp in the promoter, to which Sp3 and an unidentified protein bind, was shown to be responsible for this up-regulation when combined with the introns. However no difference in the binding to this probe was observed between HSP47-producing and nonproducing cells. The responsible region for cell type- specific upregulation was found to be located in a 500-bp segment in the first intron. On electrophoresis mobility shift assay using this 500-hp probe, specific DNA-protein complexes were only observed in HSP47-producing cell extracts. These results suggest that two separate elements are necessary for the cell type-specific expression of the hsp47 gene; one is a putative Sp1-binding site at -210 bp necessary for basal expression, and the other is a 500-hp region within the first intron, required for cell type-specific expression.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)35703-35710
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume274
Issue number50
DOIs
StatePublished - 10 Dec 1999
Externally publishedYes

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