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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 265, Issue 11, 6098-6103, 04, 1990
The human oxytocin gene promoter is regulated by estrogens
S Richard and HH Zingg
Laboratory of Molecular Endocrinology, Royal Victoria Hospital, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Gonadal steroids affect brain function primarily by altering the expression
of specific genes, yet the specific mechanisms by which neuronal target
genes undergo such regulation are unknown. Recent evidence suggests that
the expression of the neuropeptide gene for oxytocin (OT) is modulated by
estrogens. We therefore examined the possibility that this regulation
occurred via a direct interaction of the estrogen-receptor complex with
cis-acting elements flanking the OT gene. DNA-mediated gene transfer
experiments were performed using Neuro- 2a neuroblastoma cells and chimeric
plasmids containing portions of the human OT gene 5'-glanking region linked
to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene. We identified a 19-base pair
region located at - 164 to -146 upstream of the transcription start site
which is capable of conferring estrogen responsiveness to the homologous as
well as to a heterologous promoter. The hormonal response is strictly
dependent on the presence of intracellular estrogen receptors, since
estrogen induced stimulation occurred only in Neuro-2a cells co-transfected
with an expression vector for the human estrogen receptor. The identified
region contains a novel imperfect palindrome (GGTGACCTTGACC) with sequence
similarity to other estrogen response elements (EREs). To define cis-acting
elements that function in synergism with the ERE, sequences 3' to the ERE
were deleted, including the CCAAT box, two additional motifs corresponding
to the right half of the ERE palindrome (TGACC), as well as a CTGCTAA
heptamer similar to the "elegans box" found in Caenorhabditis elegans.
Interestingly, optimal function of the identified ERE was fully independent
of these elements and only required a short promoter region (-49 to +36).
Our studies define a molecular mechanism by which estrogens can directly
modulate OT gene expression. However, only a subset of OT neurons are
capable of binding estrogens, therefore, direct action of estrogens on the
OT gene may be restricted to a subpopulation of OT neurons.

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Copyright © 1990 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
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