Abstract

MEF2 (myocyte enhancer factor 2) proteins are a small family of transcription factors that play pivotal roles in striated muscle differentiation, development, and metabolism, in neuron survival and synaptic formation, and in lymphocyte selection and activation. Products of the four mammalian MEF2 genes, MEF2A, MEF2B, MEF2C, and MEF2D, are expressed with overlapping but distinct temporospatial patterns. Toward analysis of MEF2A functions and the determinants of its regulated expression, we have mapped and begun studies of the transcriptional control regions of this gene. Heterogeneous 5'-untranslated regions of MEF2A mRNAs result from use of alternative promoters and splicing patterns. The two closely approximated TATA-less promoters are approximately 65 kb upstream of the exon containing the sole initiation codon. Ribonuclease protection and primer extension assays show that each promoter is active in various adult tissues. A canonical MEF2 site overlies the major promoter 1 transcription start site. This element specifically binds MEF2 factors, including endogenous nuclear MEF2A according to chromatin immunoprecipitation studies, and is critical to MEF2A transcription in myocytes. The site exerts reciprocal control of the alternative promoters, silencing promoter 1 and activating promoter 2 under some conditions. Erk5 and p38 MAPK signaling stimulate MEF2A expression by activating both promoters from the MEF2 element. MEF2A transcription is therefore subject to positive or negative regulation by its protein products, depending on signaling activities that influence MEF2 factor trans-activity. The sole MEF2 gene of the cephalochordate amphioxus has a similar regulatory region structure, suggesting that this mode of autoregulatory control is conserved among higher metazoan MEF2 genes.

Highlights

  • Studies of MEF2 function initially focused on myogenesis and muscle-specific gene expression [6]

  • Because a MEF2-responsive reporter gene was highly active in the myocardium of the mef2aϪ/Ϫ mice, and targeted disruption of mef2c does not give mitochondrial defects, MEF2A may serve a unique role among the MEF2 isotypes in mitochondrial biogenesis

  • We have begun to examine the control of MEF2A transcription by these elements, and we focus in this report on the MEF2 element

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Summary

Introduction

Studies of MEF2 function initially focused on myogenesis and muscle-specific gene expression [6]. In human HEK293T cells, which express a relatively low level of MEF2 proteins, ChIP detected MEF2A binding to the promoter 1/exon A1 region (Fig. 7A).

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