Regulation of Gγ-Globin Gene By ATF2 and Its Associated Proteins through the Camp-Response Element

item.page.doi

Abstract

The upstream Gγ-globin cAMP-response element (G-CRE) plays an important role in regulating Gγ-globin expression through binding of ATF2 and its DNA-binding partners defined in this study. ATF2 knockdown resulted in a significant reduction of γ-globin expression accompanied by decreased ATF2 binding to the G-CRE. By contrast, stable ATF2 expression in K562 cells increased γ-globin transcription which was reduced by ATF2 knockdown. Moreover, a similar effect of ATF2 on γ-globin expression was observed in primary erythroid progenitors. To understand the role of ATF2 in γ-globin expression, chromatographically purified G-CRE/ATF2-interacting proteins were subjected to mass spectrometry analysis; major binding partners included CREB1, cJun, Brg1, and histone deacetylases among others. Immunoprecipitation assays demonstrated interaction of these proteins with ATF2 and in vivo GCRE binding in CD34(+) cells undergoing erythroid differentiation which was correlated with γ-globin expression during development. These results suggest synergism between developmental stage-specific recruitments of the ATF2 protein complex and expression of γ-globin during erythropoiesis. Microarray studies in K562 cells support ATF2 plays diverse roles in hematopoiesis and chromatin remodeling.;

Description

Keywords

Chromatin, DNA--Methylation, DNA-binding proteins, Gene expression, Genetic regulation

item.page.sponsorship

"This work was supported by grant HL69234 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute to Dr. Betty Pace. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Rights

CC BY 4.0 (Attribution), ©2014 The Authors.

Citation