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RUNX1/AML1 functions and mechanisms regulating granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor transcriptionLiu, Hebin January 2005 (has links)
Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) is a multipotent cytokine involved in the production and function of hematopoietic cells, and GM-CSF plays in particular a major role in responses to infection and physiological and pathological inflammatory processes. GM-CSF is produced in many cell types, and increases in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration are, like in many other systems, of major importance in the intracellular signaling that determines GM-CSF expression after receptor stimulation of the cells. Previous studies have shown that the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphatase calcineurin (CN) mediates stimulation of GM-CSF transcription in response to Ca2+. This thesis shows that Ca2+ signaling also regulates GM-CSF transcription negatively through Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase II (CaMK II) phosphorylation of serines in the autoinhibitory domain for DNA binding of the transcription factor Ets1. Mutation of the CaMK II target serines increased transactivation of the GM-CSF promoter/enhancer and decreased the sensitivity to inhibition by increased Ca2+ or constitutively active CaMK II. The Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation of Ets1 was also shown to reduce the binding of Ets1 to the GM-CSF promoter in vivo. RUNX1, also known as acute myeloid leukemia 1 (AML1), is one of three mammalian RUNX transcription factors and has many essential functions in hematopoiesis. RUNX1 has also many important roles in the immune system, and RUNX1 is the most frequent target for chromosomal translocation of genes in acute human leukemias. This thesis shows that RUNX1 directly interacts with both subunits of CN and that the strongest interaction is localised to the regulatory CN subunit and the DNA binding domain of the RUNX protein. Constitutively active CN was shown to activate the promoter/enhancer of GM-CSF synergistically with RUNX1, RUNX2 or RUNX3, and the Ets1 binding site of the promoter was shown to be essential for the synergy between RUNX1 and CN in Jurkat T cells. The analysis suggests that Ets1 phosphorylated by the protein kinase glycogen synthase kinase-3β is the target of RUNX1-recruited CN phosphatase at the GM-CSF promoter. Transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) is another multipotent cytokine that often has a role opposite to that of GM-CSF in inflammatory responses since it is a potent suppressor of immune cells and therefore is anti-inflammatory. This thesis shows that TGF-β can decrease transcription from a GM-CSF promoter/enhancer. Certain constitutively active TGF-β receptors and the TGF-β activated transcription factor Smad3 could also repress GM-CSF transcription, whereas several other Smad proteins did not have this inhibitory effect. The inhibition required intact DNA binding ability of Smad3, and the 125 bp upstream of the transcription initiation site, which was sufficient for the inhibition, contains several weak Smad binding sites near the TATA box next to an Ets1 site of the promoter. Smad3 was able to bind to the promoter DNA together with Ets1 and could also be in complex with Ets1 in the absence of DNA. Surface plasmon resonance analysis revealed that Ets1 interacted with the DNA binding domain of Smad3, and the binding constant of this interaction was about 1 µM. The results identify a negative regulation of the GM-CSF promoter by TGF-β signaling through direct Smad3 binding and indicate that the mechanism is by Smad3 interaction with Ets1 and perhaps other proteins around the TATA box of the promoter. This thesis also identifies a novel transactivation domain in the N-terminal of RUNX1 including the N-terminal α-helix in the DNA binding domain. The domain was also required for RUNX2 and RUNX3 transactivation. Despite this, the N-terminal domain of RUNX1 was not essential for RUNX1 function in megakaryocytopoiesis in vitro from mouse embryonic stem cells.
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