Abstract

Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) plays a key role in skeletal growth by stimulating bone cell replication and differentiation. We previously showed that prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and other cAMP-activating agents enhanced IGF-I gene transcription in cultured primary rat osteoblasts through promoter 1, the major IGF-I promoter, and identified a short segment of the promoter, termed HS3D, that was essential for hormonal regulation of IGF-I gene expression. We now demonstrate that CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein (C/EBP) delta is a major component of a PGE2-stimulated DNA-protein complex involving HS3D and find that C/EBPdelta transactivates IGF-I promoter 1 through this site. Competition gel shift studies first indicated that a core C/EBP half-site (GCAAT) was required for binding of a labeled HS3D oligomer to osteoblast nuclear proteins. Southwestern blotting and UV-cross-linking studies showed that the HS3D probe recognized a approximately 35-kDa nuclear protein, and antibody supershift assays indicated that C/EBPdelta comprised most of the PGE2-activated gel-shifted complex. C/EBPdelta was detected by Western immunoblotting in osteoblast nuclear extracts after treatment of cells with PGE2. An HS3D oligonucleotide competed effectively with a high affinity C/EBP site from the rat albumin gene for binding to osteoblast nuclear proteins. Co-transfection of osteoblast cell cultures with a C/EBPdelta expression plasmid enhanced basal and PGE2-activated IGF-I promoter 1-luciferase activity but did not stimulate a reporter gene lacking an HS3D site. By contrast, an expression plasmid for the related protein, C/EBPbeta, did not alter basal IGF-I gene activity but did increase the response to PGE2. In osteoblasts and in COS-7 cells, C/EBPdelta, but not C/EBPbeta, transactivated a reporter gene containing four tandem copies of HS3D fused to a minimal promoter; neither transcription factor stimulated a gene with four copies of an HS3D mutant that was unable to bind osteoblast nuclear proteins. These results identify C/EBPdelta as a hormonally activated inducer of IGF-I gene transcription in osteoblasts and show that the HS3D element within IGF-I promoter 1 is a high affinity binding site for this protein.

Highlights

  • Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) plays a key role in skeletal growth by stimulating bone cell replication and differentiation

  • We previously showed that prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and other cAMP-activating agents enhanced IGF-I gene transcription in cultured primary rat osteoblasts through promoter 1, the major IGF-I promoter, and identified a short segment of the promoter, termed HS3D, that was essential for hormonal regulation of IGF-I gene expression

  • We show that C/EBP␦, a member of the CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein family, appears in osteoblast nuclear extracts after treatment of cells with PGE2, that it interacts with an HS3D oligonucleotide probe with an affinity similar to that of a well characterized C/EBP site, and that it transactivates IGF-I promoter 1 and another neutral promoter only when a native HS3D sequence is present

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Summary

IDENTIFICATION OF A NOVEL CYCLIC AMP SIGNALING PATHWAY IN BONE*

Yutaka Umayahara‡, Changhua Ji§, Michael Centrella§, Peter Rotwein‡¶, and Thomas L. In osteoblasts and in COS-7 cells, C/EBP␦, but not C/EBP␤, transactivated a reporter gene containing four tandem copies of HS3D fused to a minimal promoter; neither transcription factor stimulated a gene with four copies of an HS3D mutant that was unable to bind osteoblast nuclear proteins These results identify C/EBP␦ as a hormonally activated inducer of IGF-I gene transcription in osteoblasts and show that. We demonstrated by gel mobility shift assays that PGE2 treatment induced nuclear protein binding to an HS3D oligonucleotide probe by a mechanism that did not require ongoing protein synthesis (22) Based on these observations and on the absence of a typical CRE DNA sequence within the hormonally respon-.

First PCR Second PCR
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
TABLE II Oligonucleotides used in gel mobility shift experiments
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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