Regulation of human COL2A1 gene expression in chondrocytes. Identification of C-Krox-responsive elements and modulation by phenotype alteration.
Publication/Presentation Date
9-1-2000
Abstract
To identify control motifs involved in human type II collagen gene transcription in both differentiated and dedifferentiated rabbit articular chondrocytes, transient transfection experiments were performed. A 715-base pair (bp) region of the first intron (+2127/+2842), including a 153-bp sequence so far uncharacterized (+2689/+2842), was found to mediate enhancer activity. In dedifferentiated chondrocytes, this enhancer activity was shown to be less effective than in primary cultures but still present. We then demonstrated that a zinc finger protein, C-Krox, activates COL2A1 gene transcription in differentiated chondrocytes through the enhancer region, whereas in subcultured cells, it inhibited the gene activity via a 266-bp promoter. Multicopies of the C-Krox binding site were found to mediate transactivation in both primary cultures and passaged cells, whereas C-Krox overexpression inhibited transcription in dedifferentiated chondrocytes. Additionally, we showed that C-Krox binds to several cis sequences that mediate its transcriptional effects. During chondrocyte dedifferentiation, the protein levels and binding activity of C-Krox were reduced, whereas those of NF-kappaB were increased. This was not associated with variations of mRNA levels, suggesting that post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms could be involved in C-Krox expression. These results suggest that C-Krox plays a major role in type II collagen expression and the chondrocyte phenotype modulation.
Volume
275
Issue
35
First Page
27421
Last Page
27438
ISSN
0021-9258
Published In/Presented At
Ghayor, C., Herrouin, J. F., Chadjichristos, C., Ala-Kokko, L., Takigawa, M., Pujol, J. P., & Galéra, P. (2000). Regulation of human COL2A1 gene expression in chondrocytes. Identification of C-Krox-responsive elements and modulation by phenotype alteration. The Journal of biological chemistry, 275(35), 27421–27438. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M002139200
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
10856292
Department(s)
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Document Type
Article