Volume 270,
Number 31,
Issue of August 04, pp. 18285-18294, 1995
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Induction of
Heparin-binding EGF-like Growth Factor Expression during Myogenesis
ACTIVATION OF THE GENE BY MyoD AND LOCALIZATION OF THE
TRANSMEMBRANE FORM OF THE PROTEIN ON THE MYOTUBE SURFACE
(Received for publication, March 24, 1995; and in revised form, May 23, 1995)
Xiaorong
Chen
,
Gerhard
Raab
,
Urban
Deutsch
,
Jianchun
Zhang
,
Robert
M.
Ezzell
,
Michael
Klagsbrun
Heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor
(HB-EGF) gene expression and protein localization were analyzed during
the process of myogenic differentiation. The mouse HB-EGF gene was
isolated, and a 1.8-kilobase genomic fragment flanking the 5` end of
the cDNA was cloned. This fragment contains two sequences which match
the consensus CANNTG sequence for E-boxes, binding sites for the MyoD
family of DNA-binding transcription factors that regulate myogenesis.
Accordingly, HB-EGF synthesis was analyzed in 10T1/2 cells and C2C12
cells which are used commonly for the study of myogenesis. HB-EGF gene
expression was up-regulated in both cell types during myogenesis. In
10T1/2 cells, direct activation of HB-EGF gene expression by MyoD was
shown in that: i) transient transfection of these cells with a plasmid
expressing MyoD resulted in a 10-20-fold increase in endogenous
HB-EGF mRNA levels; ii) co-transfection of MyoD and an HB-EGF
promoter-reporter plasmid resulted in a 5-10-fold increase in
reporter activity, an increase that was abrogated by deletion of a
putative HB-EGF proximal E-box sequence; and iii) incubation of MyoD
protein with a 25-base pair double-stranded oligonucleotide
corresponding to the HB-EGF proximal E-box sequence resulted in
retarded electrophoretic mobility of the oligonucleotide. In C2C12
cells, differentiation of myoblasts into myotubes resulted in a
40-50-fold increase in HB-EGF promoter activity. In addition,
immunostaining and laser confocal microscopy detected HB-EGF protein in
C2C12 myotubes but not in myoblasts. The HB-EGF produced was in its
transmembrane form and localized to the myotube surface. Taken
together, it was concluded that during skeletal muscle cell
differentiation, MyoD plays a direct role in activating HB-EGF gene
expression and that HB-EGF protein is expressed preferentially in
myotubes and in its membrane-anchored form.