Published in: Nucleic Acids Research, Volume 28, Issue 5: pp. 1126-1132 (March 1, 2000):
" Tissue-Specific Chromatin Structure of the Phenobarbital-Responsive Unit and Proximal Promoter of CYP2B1/2 and Modulation by Phenobarbital".
Jongsook Kim, Ilia Rivera-Rivera, and Byron Kemper
Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology and College of Medicine at Urbana-Champaign, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801, USA
Abstract:
Phenobarbital induction of transcription of CYP2B genes is
mediated by an enhancer, termed a phenobarbital responsive unit (PBRU),
~2000 bp 5[prime] of the transcription start site. To further delineate
the mechanism of phenobarbital induction, protein binding in native chromatin
and the nucleosomal structure of the PBRU and proximal promoter were examined
in liver and kidney, in which the CYP2B1/2 genes are expressed and
not expressed, respectively. Protein binding to the PBRU in kidney chromatin
was not detected even though in vitro DNase I footprints were not
detectably different with nuclear extracts from liver and kidney. Likewise,
protein binding to regulatory motifs was not detected in the proximal promoter
region in kidney chromatin. In liver chromatin, however, DNase I hypersensitivity
and partial protection of the regulatory motifs from DNase I digestion
or reaction with dimethyl sulfate was observed and phenobarbital treatment
increased the hypersensitivity but only modestly affected protection. Low
resolution Southern analysis of micrococcal nuclease-digested chromatin
from untreated rats revealed micrococcal nuclease hypersensitive regions
in the proximal promoter and PBRU regions in liver, but not in kidney.
Phenobarbital treatment increased hypersensitivity in liver in both regions.
Micrococcal nuclease hypersensitivity in the PBRU was largely restricted
to a linker region between phased nucleosomes while in the proximal promoter
hypersensitivity extended over ~200 bp suggesting disruption of a nucleosome
in this region. These data indicate that in liver phenobarbital treatment
substantially alters protein binding to regulatory motifs in the PBRU,
while not greatly affecting such binding in the proximal promoter, and
substantially alters chromatin structure in both regions, presumably as
a result of chromatin modifying factors recruited to the PBRU. In the kidney,
chromatin is probably in a closed conformation that prevents binding of
regulatory factors.
Additional References:
1. Frenster JH, "Nuclear Polyanions as De-Repressors of Synthesis of Ribonucleic Acid".
2. Frenster JH, "Electron
Microscopic Localization of Acridine Orange Binding to DNA within Human
Leukemic Bone Marrow Cells".
Top of Page - Euchromatin
Network - Current
Research - Forums - Other
Sites - Future Events
-
For Further Information and Feedback:
E-mail: matcog@ix.netcom.com
euchromatin: "the most active portion of the genome within the
cell nucleus".