Abstract
To examine possible mechanisms underlying osteoblast differentiation from mesenchymal stem cells, we investigated bHLH functional activity in cell lines representing different stages of osteoblast maturation. Interaction of nuclear proteins with oligonucleotides corresponding to various bHLH binding sequences (known as E-boxes) was determined in mobility shift assays. Both ADD-1 oligonucleotide, a binding site for transcription factor ADD-1, and OCE-1, an E-box from osteocalcin promoter, produced retarded bands after incubation with nuclear extracts from osteogenic cells. Cells at different stages of osteogenic maturation demonstrated similar patterns and intensity of binding, as did cells treated with different osteogenic inducers. Binding to ADD-1 and OCE-1 was not tissue-specific as it was also observed in fibroblastic 10T1/2 cells. MEF-1 oligonucleotide, the E-box sequence from the muscle creatine kinase enhancer, demonstrated no changes in binding with nuclear extracts from moderately differentiated (W-20) or relatively mature (ROS 17/2.8) cells under any conditions tested. However, in poorly differentiated RI-2J cells, which do not express osteogenic markers unless treated with dexamethasone, induction of differentiation was reflected in transient inhibition of binding to MEF-1. Inhibition of binding was not seen under differentiation-restrictive conditions. Promoter-reporter studies also demonstrated inhibition of MEF-1 driven CAT expression by dexamethasone under differentiation-permissive conditions in RI-2J cells. These data suggest that bHLH gene expression is not required for the early steps of osteogenesis; moreover, inhibition of bHLH protein binding to a MEF1-type E box might be an integral part of osteogenic commitment.
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