Abstract

Transcriptional regulation of the interleukin-5 (IL-5) gene in T lymphocytes appears to be of central importance in the control of the eosinophilia characteristic of allergic responses and certain parasite infections. Previous studies of IL-5 gene regulation have been hampered by the lack of a transfection assay, which detects the antigen-responsive enhancer in the IL-5 promoter. Here we show that stable transfection of the Th2 clone D10.G4.1 and the T lymphoma EL4.23 with chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene constructs carrying the region to -3859 gives inducible expression with the known regulatory characteristics of the endogenous IL-5 gene. To facilitate detailed analysis of the promoter region, 3.9 kb of DNA sequence immediately up stream of the start of transcription was determined and the minimum upstream region required for inducible expression was further localized, by stable transfection studies in EL4.23 cells, to the region up to -1016. A CTF/NF1 site in the upstream enhancer at -940 to -928 was shown to be required for regulated inducible expression. Mutation of this sequence motif abolished inducibility and also prevented binding of the sequence to a nuclear protein(s). A TCATTT-containing element in the proximal promoter region was also demonstrated to be essential for inducible expression of the IL-5 gene, similar to the role of this conserved element in the transcriptional regulation of the granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and IL-4 genes.

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