Evidence for Pituitary Repression of the Human Growth Hormone-Related Placental Lactogen Genes and a Role for P Sequences.

Journal: International Journal Of Molecular Sciences
Published:
Abstract

The human (h) growth hormone (GH)/placental lactogen (PL) gene family has served as an important model to study tissue-specific expression. The two GH genes (hGH-N/GH1 and GH-V/GH2) and three PL or chorionic somatomammotropin hormone (CSH) genes (hPL-L/CSL1, hPL-A/CSH1 and hPL-B/CSH2) are clustered together at a single locus. Although they share >90% sequence similarity, hGH-N is expressed by somatotrophs of the anterior pituitary while the remaining four hGH/PL genes are expressed by the villous syncytiotrophoblast of the placenta. Efficient pituitary expression depends on a locus control region (LCR) that includes nuclease hypersensitive sites I-V (HS I-V). For activation, data indicate that HS III facilitates the initial access of pituitary-specific transcription factor Pit-1 to the locus, where it is required to bind Pit-1 sites at HS I/II and the hGH-N promoter. This is associated with histone acetylation and tri-methylation modifications that are consistent with active chromatin. However, all five hGH/PL genes share similar nuclease sensitivity in human pituitary chromatin, suggesting similar levels of accessibility and thus potential for transcription. Furthermore, hPL-A and hPL-B promoters contain Pit-1 binding sites, and the hPL-A promoter, like hGH-N, will support expression in transfected pituitary tumor GC cells in culture. These observations suggest the possibility of a transcriptional repressor mechanism that prevents hPL gene expression in the pituitary. P sequences were identified as a candidate. They are located upstream of all four placental hGH/PL genes but not hGH-N, repress hPL-A promoter activity in transfected pituitary GC cells, and bind a forkhead box A1/nuclear factor-1 transcription, which is proposed to act as a repressor complex in human pituitary chromatin. In spite of this, the inability to limit hGH-N expression when tested in transgenic mice brought the role of P sequences in pituitary repression into question. These observations are re-examined here in light of new evidence that the LCR (HS III) interacts with P sequences in the human pituitary.

Authors
Peter Cattini, Yan Jin