Abstract

Multiple AUUUA elements similar to those that regulate the degradation of several different mRNAs are conserved in the 3'-untranslated region (3'-UTR) of cholesterol-7alpha-hydroxylase (CYP7A1) mRNAs from several species. We examined if stabilization of mRNA decay could account for the >20-fold increase in the expression of CYP7A1 mRNA without a detectable change in transcription following dexamethasone treatment of rat hepatoma cells (L35 cells). Following RNA polymerase II-dependent transcription block or protein synthesis block, the decay of CYP7A1 mRNA displayed a short half-life ( approximately 30 min). Control experiments showed that in cells pre-treated with a RNA polymerase II inhibitor, dexamethasone had no detectable effect on CYP7A1 mRNA decay. Stable expression of luciferase reporter mRNAs in L35 cells showed that the CYP7A1 3'-UTR was required to observe a dexamethasone induction. To examine the hypothesis that a labile protein is required for dexamethasone-induced mRNA stabilization, cells were stably transfected with a tetracycline-repressible promoter that drives the expression of a green fluorescent protein analogue (ECFP) with or without the 3'-UTR of CYP7A1. Cells expressing ECFP with the 3'-UTR of CYP7A1 displayed a 3-fold dexamethasone induction of ECFP mRNA, whereas cells expressing ECFP without the 3'-UTR did not. Moreover, specific block of the transcription of ECFP containing the 3'-UTR by adding the tetracycline analogue doxycycline clearly displayed dexamethasone-induced stabilization of mRNA decay. These data provide compelling evidence that a putative labile protein and the 3'-UTR of CYP7A1 act together to decrease the rate of CYP7A1 mRNA degradation.

Highlights

  • The initial step controlling bile acid synthesis from cholesterol is catalyzed by cholesterol-7␣-hydroxylase (CYP7A11; EC 1.14.13.17)

  • Our results show that the 3Ј-UTR of rat CYP7A1 and a labile protein, which is rapidly depleted from cells whose transcription or translation is blocked, are sufficient to allow dexamethasone-induced stabilization of mRNA decay

  • A Labile Protein Is Required for Dexamethasone to Stabilize mRNA Containing the 3Ј-UTR of CYP7A1—To examine the hypothesis that a labile protein is necessary for dexamethasone-induced stabilization of mRNAs containing the CYP7A1 3Ј-UTR, we developed an experimental approach that would block the transcription of a reporter mRNA with and without the CYP7A1 3Ј-UTR

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Summary

Introduction

The initial step controlling bile acid synthesis from cholesterol is catalyzed by cholesterol-7␣-hydroxylase (CYP7A11; EC 1.14.13.17) (reviewed in Refs. 1–5). Changes in CYP7A1 gene transcription appear to play a major role in regulating expression levels Previous studies suggested that a post-transcriptional mechanism (e.g. stabilization of mRNA) might have been responsible for a Ͼ20-fold increase in the steady-state levels of CYP7A1 mRNA in L35 rat hepatoma cells treated with dexamethasone [14]. This hypothesis was based solely on the observation that no detectable change in CYP7A1 transcription was observed in nuclei prepared from control and dexamethasone-treated cells [14]. Our results show that the 3Ј-UTR of rat CYP7A1 and a labile protein, which is rapidly depleted from cells whose transcription or translation is blocked, are sufficient to allow dexamethasone-induced stabilization of mRNA decay

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