Abstract

The effects of rifampicin treatment on SULT2A1 mRNA expression were evaluated in 23 preparations of primary cultured human hepatocytes. In contrast to the consistently occurring induction of CYP3A4, a prototypical pregnane X receptor (PXR) target gene, rifampicin treatment increased SULT2A1 mRNA levels in 12 of the hepatocyte preparations, but it produced little change or even suppression in the others. Transient transfection of HepG2 cells with a series of reporter constructs implicated two SULT2A1 5'-flanking regions as containing rifampicin-responsive information. Each of these regions contained a hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 (HNF4) binding site (at nucleotide [nt] -6160 and -54), as demonstrated by in vitro binding and site-directed mutagenesis. HNF4alpha bound to the HNF4-54 region of the endogenous SULT2A1 gene, as indicated by chromatin immunoprecipitation. Cotransfection of HepG2 cells with pregnane X receptor (PXR) dose-dependently suppressed reporter expression from SULT2A1 constructs containing the HNF4 sites, and rifampicin treatment augmented the suppression. Rifampicin treatment concentration-dependently suppressed SULT2A1 reporter expression at the same concentrations that progressively induced expression from a PXR-responsive CYP3A4 reporter, whereas higher rifampicin concentrations reversed the SULT2A1 suppression. The suppressive effect of rifampicin was diminished, whereas the activating effect was augmented, in HepG2 cells with RNA interference-mediated PXR knockdown. These results suggest that HNF4alpha plays a central role in the control of SULT2A1 transcription and that rifampicin-liganded PXR suppresses SULT2A1 expression by interfering with HNF4alpha activity. By contrast, the rifampicin-inducible SULT2A1 expression that occurs in many human hepatocyte preparations seems to be mediated through a PXR-independent mechanism.

Full Text
Paper version not known

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