Abstract

The expression of the interleukin (IL-6) gene can be regulated by various activating or inhibitory stimuli. This modulation involves several regulatory binding sites on the IL-6 promoter, and appears to be in general cell-specific. We have previously described that the nuclear 24 kDa isoform of fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) is able to increase IL-6 gene expression in NIH-3T3 cells. The transduction pathway involved was shown to be distinct from the extracellular mode of action of the smallest 18 kDa FGF-2 isoform. In the present study, we show that 24 kDa FGF-2-encoding vectors transfected into HeLa cells inhibit various co-transfected constructs incorporating the promoter element of the IL-6 gene and either the luciferase or the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase units. This down-regulation occurs dose-dependently with the 24 kDa FGF-2, is IL-6-promoter-specific, and does not involve an autocrine loop of the growth factor, since exogenously added FGF-2 fails to modulate the IL-6 promoter activity. Furthermore, 24 kDa FGF-2 inhibits the activity of both the co-transfected deletion mutants IL-6(-224) and IL-6(-158), and the point-mutated IL-6 promoter constructs in which the activating protein-1, nuclear factor (NF)-IL-6 and NF-ĸB elements are disrupted. We identify a responsive region to 24 kDa FGF-2 between positions -158 and -109 on the IL-6 promoter, which notably contains a retinoblastoma control element.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call