Abstract

We previously reported that 2.1 kilobase pairs of the 5'-flanking sequence are sufficient for tissue-specific and hormonal/metabolic regulation of the fatty-acid synthase (FAS) gene in transgenic mice. We also demonstrated that the -65 E-box is required for insulin regulation of the FAS promoter using 3T3-L1 adipocytes in culture. To further define sequences required for FAS gene expression, we generated transgenic mice carrying from -644, -444, -278, and -131 to +67 base pairs of the rat FAS 5'-flanking sequence fused to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter gene. Similar to the expression observed with -2100-FAS-CAT transgenic mice, transgenic mice harboring -644-FAS-CAT and -444-FAS-CAT expressed high levels of CAT mRNA only in lipogenic tissues (liver and adipose tissue) in a manner identical to the endogenous FAS mRNA. In contrast, -278-FAS-CAT and -131-FAS-CAT transgenic mice did not show appreciable CAT expression in any of the tissues examined. When previously fasted mice were refed a high carbohydrate, fat-free diet, CAT mRNA expression in transgenic mice harboring -644-FAS-CAT and -444-FAS-CAT was induced dramatically in liver and adipose tissue. The induction was virtually identical to that observed in -2100-FAS-CAT transgenic mice and to the endogenous FAS mRNA. In contrast, -278-FAS-CAT transgenic mice showed induction by feeding, but at a much lower magnitude in both liver and adipose tissue. The -131-FAS-CAT transgenic mice did not show any CAT expression either when fasted or refed a high carbohydrate diet. To study further the effect of insulin, we made these transgenic mice insulin-deficient by streptozotocin treatment. Insulin administration to the streptozotocin-diabetic mice increased CAT mRNA levels driven by the -644 FAS and -444 FAS promoters in liver and adipose tissue, paralleling the endogenous FAS mRNA levels. In the case of -278-FAS-CAT, the induction observed was at a much lower magnitude, and deletion to -131 base pairs did not show any increase in CAT expression by insulin. This study demonstrates that the sequence requirement for FAS gene regulation employing an in vitro culture system does not reflect the in vivo situation and that two 5'-flanking regions are required for proper nutritional and insulin regulation of the FAS gene. Cotransfection of the upstream stimulatory factor and various FAS promoter-luciferase constructs as well as in vitro binding studies suggest a function for the upstream stimulatory factor at both the -65 and -332 E-box sequences.

Highlights

  • Fatty-acid synthase (FAS)1 plays a central role in de novo lipogenesis in mammals (1)

  • Unlike the results we reported using transient transfection into 3T3-L1 adipocytes (7, 9), which demonstrated a requirement for the Ϫ65 E-box for insulin regulation, we did not detect any chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) expression driven by the Ϫ131 FAS promoter region in transgenic mice

  • Expression of the FAS Promoter-CAT Fusion Gene in Transgenic Mice—We previously reported that 2.1 kb of the 5Ј-flanking sequence are sufficient for tissue-specific and hormonally regulated expression of the FAS gene in vivo (18)

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Summary

Regulation of the FAS Promoter in Transgenic Mice

Schweizer and co-workers (16) reported a DNasehypersensitive site at Ϫ568 to Ϫ468 bp where nuclear factor Y and Sp1 can cooperatively bind and mediate insulin regulation of the FAS gene Another DNase-hypersensitive site at ϩ290 to ϩ316 bp, located in the first intron with consensus USF- and CCAAT-binding transcription factor/nuclear factor-1-binding sites, was implicated as a glucose response element of the FAS gene (17). The only report that addresses the sequence requirement for the FAS gene in vivo is our previous 2.1-kb FAS promoter-CAT transgenic mice studies (18). Unlike the results we reported using transient transfection into 3T3-L1 adipocytes (7, 9), which demonstrated a requirement for the Ϫ65 E-box for insulin regulation, we did not detect any CAT expression driven by the Ϫ131 FAS promoter region in transgenic mice. In vitro binding and transactivation studies suggest that USF binding at Ϫ332 bp may be involved in the maximal induction of the FAS promoter in vivo

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