Abstract

In order to investigate the mechanism(s) governing the striated muscle-specific expression of cytochrome c oxidase VIaH we have characterized the murine gene and analyzed its transcriptional regulatory elements in skeletal myogenic cell lines. The gene is single copy, spans 689 base pairs (bp), and is comprised of three exons. The 5'-ends of transcripts from the gene are heterogeneous, but the most abundant transcript includes a 5'-untranslated region of 30 nucleotides. When fused to the luciferase reporter gene, the 3.5-kilobase 5'-flanking region of the gene directed the expression of the heterologous protein selectively in differentiated Sol8 cells and transgenic mice, recapitulating the pattern of expression of the endogenous gene. Deletion analysis identified a 300-bp fragment sufficient to direct the myotube-specific expression of luciferase in Sol8 cells. The region lacks an apparent TATA element, and sequence motifs predicted to bind NRF-1, NRF-2, ox-box, or PPAR factors known to regulate other nuclear genes encoding mitochondrial proteins are not evident. Mutational analysis, however, identified two cis-elements necessary for the high level expression of the reporter protein: a MEF2 consensus element at -90 to -81 bp and an E-box element at -147 to -142 bp. Additional E-box motifs at closely located positions were mutated without loss of transcriptional activity. The dependence of transcriptional activation of cytochrome c oxidase VIaH on cis-elements similar to those found in contractile protein genes suggests that the striated muscle-specific expression is coregulated by mechanisms that control the lineage-specific expression of several contractile and cytosolic proteins.

Highlights

  • Cytochrome c oxidase (COX)1 is the terminal enzyme of the electron transport chain [1]

  • The observations that COX isolated from heart and liver have different kinetic properties and respond differently to adenine nucleotides have led to the proposal that tissue-specific subunits function to regulate holoenzyme activity to meet tissue energy demands [52]

  • The results indicate that the skeletal myotube-specific expression of COXVIaH is, in large part, regulated by the same myogenic factors that control the muscle-specific expression of contractile proteins

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cytochrome c oxidase (COX)1 is the terminal enzyme of the electron transport chain [1]. No regulatory elements essential for the transcription of genes encoding ubiquitously expressed mitochondrial proteins can be identified by sequence comparisons in the functional COXVIaH promoter region.

Results
Conclusion
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