Abstract

The inducible IκB kinase (IKKi/IKKɛ) is a recently described serine–threonine kinase that activates the transcription factors NFκB, interferon regulatory factor-3 (IRF3) and CCAAA/enhancer-binding protein (C/EBPδ). Several inflammatory agents have been shown to induce the expression of the IKKi gene in macrophages and other cell types but the mechanism is unknown. We have found that the IKKi expression was constitutive in human chondrocytes from OA cartilage and a human chondrocytic cell line C28/I2 but was up-regulated by the inflammatory cytokines TNFα or IL-1β in an NFκB-dependent manner. To understand the constitutive and inducible expression of the IKKi gene we localized the transcription start site (TSS), cloned and sequenced a 2 kb genomic DNA fragment 5′ of the TSS and characterized the putative promoter region (PPR), and identified the motifs therein that are required for basal and cytokine-induced IKKi gene promoter activity. We found that IKKi core promoter was TATA-less and by using PCR generated deletion mutants of the PPR we found that the cis-elements responsible for basal transcriptional activity were located between − 51 and − 100 bp upstream of the TSS while the cytokine response elements were located distally between − 501 and − 1000 bp upstream of the TSS. The DNA region containing the cytokine response elements had two κB sites as the most relevant regulatory motifs. The results of site-directed mutagenesis revealed that the κB site located between − 833 and − 847 bp upstream of the TSS was biologically functional and required for cytokine-induced IKKi promoter activity in human chondrocytes and HeLa cells. The silence of the other κB site (− 816/− 802) was positional, rather than sequence-specific. Over-expression of NFκB p65 mimics the TNFα-induced activation of the IKKi promoter. Also the gel shift assay suggested that NFκB p65 is responsible for activation of the IKKi promoter. These data for the first time characterize the promoter region and provide further insights into the transcriptional regulation of IKKi in human chondrocytes and other cell types.

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