Abstract

The requirements for basal expression of the LH beta-subunit promoter in pituitary gonadotropes are largely unknown. We have used the equine (e) LHbeta subunit promoter as a model to unravel the combinatorial code required for gonadotrope expression. Through the use of 5'-deletion mutagenesis, a region between -185 and -100 of the eLHbeta promoter was shown to play a critical role in maintaining basal promoter activity in alphaT3-1 and LbetaT2 cells. This region encompasses the steroidogenic factor-1 (SF-1) binding site that has been reported to have a functional role in expression of the LHbeta promoter in other species. We have also identified an additional SF-1 site at -55 to -48. Binding of SF-1 to both sites was confirmed by electrophoretic mobility shift assays. Mutations within these sites, either individually or in combination, did not attenuate basal activity of the eLHbeta promoter in alphaT3-1 cells, but did diminish promoter activity in LbetaT2 cells. Interestingly, cotransfection with an expression vector encoding SF-1 induced eLHbeta promoter activity, and this induction was abrogated by mutations within the SF-1 sites in alphaT3-1 cells. Block replacement mutagenesis was performed on the -185/-100 region of the eLHbeta promoter to identify DNA response elements responsible for maintaining basal promoter activity. From this analysis, two regions emerged as being important: a distal 31-bp segment (-181 to -150) and an element located immediately 3' to the distal SF-1 site (-119 to -106). It is hypothesized that these two regions as well as the SF-1 sites represent regulatory elements that contribute to a combinatorial code involved in targeting expression of the eLHbeta promoter to gonadotropes.

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