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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 282, Issue 35, 25748-25759, August 31, 2007
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From the Institute for Molecular Biology, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, 30625 Hannover, Germany
Received for publication, May 4, 2007 , and in revised form, June 21, 2007.
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Exhaustive searches have identified T-box genes in all metazoa ranging from hydra to humans. Mammalian genomes are known to harbor 17 family members that have been divided into five major subfamilies based on sequence conservation of the T-box. Loss-of-function studies in the mouse have revealed functional requirements of T-box genes in a diverse array of developmental processes in the post-implantation embryo including formation and patterning of the mesoderm and organogenesis (11). Notably, mutations in a number of T-box genes have been identified as underlying causes for human congenital disorders (12).
Tbx18 and Tbx15 encode a closely related pair of T-box proteins that, together with Tbx22, form a subgroup of the Tbx1 subfamily in vertebrates. Mice carrying a null allele of Tbx18 die shortly after birth due to severe malformations of the axial skeleton, a phenotype that was traced back to the function of Tbx18 in maintaining anterior-posterior somite polarity (13). Additionally, Tbx18 regulates the condensation of mesenchymal cells around the distal ureter stalk. Newborn Tbx18-/- mice display a prominent hydroureter and hydronephrosis phenotype due to the lack of the smooth muscle layer of the ureter (14). Finally, Tbx18 is essential for the formation of the sinus horns from the mesenchyme of the pericardial wall and for their myocardial differentiation (15).
Mice homozygous for a targeted null allele of Tbx15 or for the spontaneous mutation droopy ear, in which Tbx15 is deleted, exhibit defects in skin pigmentation and in the skeleton. These phenotypic changes reveal a role for Tbx15 in dorso-ventral patterning of the mouse coat and in mesenchymal aggregation that precedes endochondral bone formation (16, 17).
Loss-of-function analyses of Tbx15 and Tbx18 in mice and conservation of expression in other vertebrates has revealed the importance of this closely related pair of T-box transcription factors in an impressive number of patterning and differentiation processes during vertebrate development. In contrast, our current understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying these phenotypes is scarce since neither protein interaction partners nor transcriptional targets for either factor have been identified. As a step toward this goal we initiated a molecular analysis of Tbx18 and Tbx15 proteins. We here characterize the subcellular localization, DNA binding specificities, protein interactions, and transcriptional properties and their structural prerequisites in the two proteins. We provide evidence that competition with activating T-box proteins constitutes a possible mode of regulation of the promoters for Nppa (natriuretic peptide precursor type a) and Dll1 (Delta-like 1) in vitro and in vivo.
| EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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-globin leader and a 3'-
-globin trailer (1). For cytomegalovirus promoter/enhancer-driven expression in cells, the globin leader/cDNA/globin trailer cassette was shuttled into HindIII and EcoRI sites of pcDNA3 (Invitrogen). The Tbx18-VP16 fusion construct was generated by introduction of the Herpes simplex VP16 activator fragment (aa 419-490, kind gift of D. Kessler) in front of the stop codon of Tbx18. GAL4 fusions of Tbx18 and Tbx15 were generated by subcloning the coding sequences into the yeast-two hybrid vector pGBKT7 (Clontech) 3' of the DNA binding domain of GAL4 (aa 1-147) followed by the SV40 nuclear localization signal (NLS). cDNA fragments encoding GAL4 fusion proteins were released with HindIII (5') and SalI (3') and directionally cloned into the HindIII and XhoI sites of pcDNA3. Expression plasmids encoding Gata4.HA, Nkx2-5.FLAG, Tbx5.HA, and Tbx2 cloned into pcDNA3 were a kind gift from V. Christoffels, and expression plasmids pcDNA3.Tbx6, pcDNA3.Tbx6-VP16, pCS2+.Tcf1e, and pCS2+.
-cateninS33A were provided by B. Herrmann and have been described previously (18, 19). Bacterial expression constructs were generated as N-terminal glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusions in pGEX-4T3 (Amersham Biosciences). All plasmids were sequenced, and expression was tested on Western blot. Details on cloning strategies and primer sequences are available upon request.
Site-directed mutagenesis was performed as described (20). Mutagenesis primers for the deletion of NLS sequences were 5'-GAGAAGCAGCAACAGCTTCAATTAATCACGGAAGAGGCGGCGGG-3' (Tbx18) and 5'-GCCTTGATCGGCTCAAATATCGATTGGGAGGAGAAGGGGCTG-3' (Tbx15), and primers for the generation of point mutants in the eh1 motif were 5'-CTAAGCCTCAAGGCGCACGCATTAATTGTGGAGGCACTGATCGGC-3' (Tbx18) and 5'-GAGCTCCCGAGCACATGCATTAATCGTTGAAGCCTTGATCGGC-3' (Tbx15).
Random Binding Site Selection and EMSA—Proteins used for binding site selection and electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) were generated from pSP64 expression constructs using the SP6-coupled TNT rabbit reticulocyte lysate (Promega) according to the supplier's instructions. The binding site selection was essentially carried out as described (1). After four rounds, the gel-eluted PCR products were subcloned in pBluescript and sequenced. Oligonucleotides used in EMSA were: BS.pF, 5'-GATCCGGTTTCACACCTAGGTGTGAAAGGA-3'; BS.pR, 5'-GATCTCCTTTCACACCTAGGTGTGAAACCG-3'; BS.invF, 5'-GATCCGGAGGTGTGAAATTTCACACCTGGA-3'; BS.invR, 5'-GATCTCCAGGTGTGAAATTTCACACCTCCG-3'; BS.dirF, 5'-GATCCGGAGGTGTGAAGGTGTGAAAGGA-3'; and BS.dirR, 5'-GATCTCCTTTCACACCTTCACACCTCCG-3'. Oligonucleotides were boiled for 5 min and cooled slowly down to room temperature to anneal. Double-stranded fragments were end-labeled with T4-PNK (New England Biolabs) in the presence of [
-32P]ATP. Binding reactions for gel shift assays contained 2-5 µl of in vitro translated myc-tagged protein in a total volume of 20 µl of Nonidet P-40 buffer (5 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 80 mM NaCl, 50 mM NaF, 1 mM MgCl2, 0.1% Nonidet P-40) with 1x Complete protease inhibitor mixture (Roche Applied Science) and 1 µg of double-stranded poly(dI-dC). Reactions were preincubated for 20 min on ice before 10,000 counts of probe were added. For supershift experiments, 1 µl of anti-myc antibody (9E10, Sigma) was added to the lysate. Complexes were allowed to form at room temperature for 20 min, before the reactions were loaded on a native 4% polyacrylamide gel (0.5x Tris-borate-EDTA). Gels were run at 10 V/cm at 4 °C for 5 h before they were dried and exposed to autoradiography film.
Cell Culture, Transient Transfections, and Reporter Assays—HEK293 and HeLa cells were seeded at 20-30% confluency in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum, grown overnight, and transfected using the calcium phosphate method. For reporter assays, HeLa cells were seeded in six-well dishes and transfected with constant amounts of reporter plasmids and 25 ng of pCMV
(Clontech) for normalization. The total amount of expression plasmid was kept constant by adding empty pcDNA3. Per transfection, 250 ng of 5xGAL4UAS-tk-luciferase reporter plasmid (a kind gift of J. Milbrandt), 75 ng of pGL3.Nppa-luciferase, containing a 0.7-kb fragment of the mouse Nppa promoter (a kind gift of V. Christoffels), or 75 ng of pKS.msd-luciferase (kindly provided by B. Herrmann) was used (18, 19); luciferase and
-galactosidase activities were measured 48 h after transfection. All transfections were performed in duplicates, and experiments were repeated at least three times. After normalization, the mean luciferase activities and standard deviations were plotted as "fold activation" when compared with the empty expression plasmid. p values were determined with the Student's t test.
Immunofluorescence—Experiments in HEK293 cells were performed according to standard protocols. Primary antibodies used were rat anti-HA (3F10, Roche Applied Science) and mouse anti-myc (9E10, Sigma), both at 1:200 dilutions, and secondary antibodies were donkey anti-rat IgG(H + L) fluorescein isothiocyanate and donkey anti-mouse IgG(H + L) rhodamine (both Dianova), at 1:200 dilutions. Immunofluorescent detection of proteins was repeated at least three times, and representative examples were photographed on a Leica DM5000 microscope with DFC300FX camera (Leica).
GST Pulldown and Co-immunoprecipitation Assays—GST and GST-Tbx18 fusion proteins were produced in the Escherichia coli strain BL21 and bound to glutathione-Sepharose 4T beads (Amersham Biosciences). HA- or myc-tagged prey proteins were produced in HEK293 cells that were lysed in pulldown buffer (20 mM HEPES, pH 7.9, 100 mM NaCl, 10 mM KCl, 5mM MgCl2, 0.5 mM EDTA, 5% glycerol, 0.05% Triton X-100, and 1 mM dithiothreitol). The binding reaction was performed as described (21). For co-immunoprecipitation assays, HEK293 cells were seeded in 10-cm dishes and either transfected with myc-tagged expression construct alone or transfected together with a HA-tagged bait construct. After 48 h, cells were lysed in 500 µl of Nonidet P-40 buffer, cellular debris was precipitated by centrifugation for 30 min at 4 °C, and the supernatant was precleared from nonspecific binding by incubation with 25 µl of protein A-agarose (Roche Applied Science). 5 µl of anti-HA antibody and 25 µl of protein A-agarose were added to the supernatant for 2 h at 4 °C, before the beads were washed three times with 500 µl of Nonidet P-40 buffer. Proteins eluted from the beads were analyzed by Western blot with anti-myc and anti-HA antibodies, and 5% of the input was loaded as a control.
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CT values using the Student's t test. In Situ Hybridization Analysis—Embryos for expression analysis were derived from matings of mice heterozygous for a mutant allele of Uncx4.1 (23). Genomic DNA prepared from yolk sac or tail biopsies was used for genotyping by PCR. For timed pregnancies, vaginal plugs were checked in the morning after mating; noon was taken as embryonic day 0.5. Fetuses were dissected in phosphate-buffered saline and fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline. Whole-mount in situ hybridization was performed following a standard procedure with digoxigenin-labeled antisense riboprobes (24). Stained specimens were transferred into 80% glycerol prior to documentation on a Leica M420 microscope with a Fujix digital camera HC-300Z. All images were processed in Adobe PhotoShop 7.0.
| RESULTS |
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We next compared the DNA binding properties of Tbx18, Tbx15, and the distant family member Brachyury by EMSA. All three proteins failed to bind to DNA fragments harboring single T half-sites under our experimental conditions (data not shown). In contrast, DNA fragments with repeats of T half-sites supported protein-DNA binding of full-length, in vitro translated Tbx18, Tbx15, and Brachyury (Fig. 3). All three proteins formed specific complexes with the consensus sites BS.inv, BS.dir, and the palindromic binding site identified for Brachyury, BS.p (Fig. 3A). Brachyury was found to bind strongly to BS.p and BS.inv but weakly to BS.dir. In the case of Tbx18 and Tbx15, BS.inv and BS.dir sites supported stronger binding than the BS.p site (Fig. 3C, open arrowheads). The addition of specific antibody resulted in the generation of slower migrating complexes (supershifts), confirming the specificity of DNA binding (Fig. 3C, black arrowheads). We next determined whether the T-box region is sufficient to recapitulate the binding characteristics of the full-length proteins (Fig. 3D). T-box-containing peptides of Tbx18, Tbx15, and Brachyury exhibited strongly diminished DNA binding (Fig. 3D, lanes 3), indicating that the N- and C-terminal regions participate in protein-DNA complex formation. T-boxes of Tbx18 and Tbx15, but not of Brachyury, exclusively bound to the BS.inv site (Fig. 3D, open arrowheads), suggesting that the T-boxes of Tbx18 and Tbx15 possess an inherent binding specificity for this sequence. A strong increase in protein-DNA complex formation was observed for all truncated T-box peptides and full-length proteins after the addition of anti-myc antibody (Fig. 3, C and D, black arrowheads). Since this effect was not observed using a probe containing a single T half-site (data not shown), we assume that the divalent antibody may stabilize binding to composite sites as dimers.
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To address whether dimerization occurs in cells, we analyzed the subcellular distribution of the myc-tagged Tbx18
NLS or Tbx15
NLS proteins (described above) by immunofluorescence in HEK293 cells upon coexpression of wild-type Tbx18 or Tbx15 (HA-tagged) proteins. Unlike for NLS mutants alone, we now detected nuclear localization of both Tbx18
NLS and Tbx15
NLS proteins (Fig. 4B), strongly suggesting that dimerization has occurred in these cells. The absence of nuclear recruitment upon coexpression of unrelated nuclear proteins confirmed the specificity of the interaction (data not shown).
Tbx18 and Tbx15 Are Potent Transcriptional Repressors—Members of the T-box gene family encode specific DNA-binding proteins that can activate or repress RNA polymerase II-mediated transcription (11). We performed luciferase reporter assays in HeLa cells to analyze how Tbx18 and Tbx15 modulate transcription. We used full-length Tbx18 and Tbx15 proteins fused to the GAL4-DNA binding domain cotransfected with a reporter plasmid containing five copies of the GAL4 binding site in front of the thymidine kinase minimal promoter (5xGal4UAS-tk-luciferase, Fig. 5A). We observed a strong and dose-dependent repression of reporter gene activity by GAL4-Tbx18 with a maximal reduction of the basal activity to 5.5 ± 0.2% (Fig. 5B). The GAL4-DNA binding domain alone did not affect the transcription of the reporter gene. GAL4-Tbx15-mediated repression of the reporter to 8.4 ± 0.1% demonstrates that Tbx18 and Tbx15 do not only share similar DNA binding properties but also strong transcriptional repressor activities.
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Tbx18 and Tbx15 Interact with Groucho Corepressors—Transcriptional repression by tissue-specific transcription factors is mediated by binding to corepressor complexes that in turn modify chromatin structure. We wondered whether we could identify corepressors of Tbx18 by analyzing the primary structure of Tbx18 for motifs known to recruit such molecules. Near the N terminus of the protein, we identified an eh1 motif (engrailed homology 1) (Fig. 6A) that had also recently been noted in a genome-wide screen (29). The eh1 motif comprises a stretch of 7 amino acid residues that is present in a large number of transcription factors of various classes and is necessary for binding of Groucho proteins (30). Groucho proteins constitute a family of highly conserved corepressors, with the members Grg1-5 (Groucho-related genes) in mouse and TLE1-4 (Transducin-like enhancers of split) in humans (31). Interestingly, the eh1 motif is also found at a conserved N-terminal position in murine Tbx15, Tbx22, and Tbx20 proteins (Fig. 6A), suggesting that these members of the Tbx1 subfamily may also act as Groucho-dependent repressors.
To experimentally explore this possibility, we tested Tbx18 binding to Groucho proteins in vitro. Pulldown assays were performed using GST-Tbx18 fusions (compare Fig. 4A) that were incubated with lysates of HEK293 cells transfected with an expression construct for HA-tagged TLE3. Strong binding of TLE3 was observed with GST-Tbx18(N+T) and GST-Tbx18(N) but not with GST-Tbx18(T) or GST-Tbx18(C), indicating that the eh1-containing N-terminal domain is necessary and sufficient for an interaction with Groucho proteins (Fig. 6B). Co-immunoprecipitation experiments in HEK293 cells cotransfected with expression constructs for myc-tagged Tbx18 alone or together with HA-tagged TLE3 confirmed the presence of a Tbx18-TLE3 complex in a cellular environment (Fig. 6C, left). Site-directed mutagenesis of the eh1 motif by replacing the amino acids phenylalanine and serine by leucine and isoleucine (Tbx18
eh1) abolished complex formation. Not unexpectedly, Tbx15 also showed eh1-dependent binding to TLE3 (Fig. 6C, right). Groucho proteins are known to bind the eh1 motif with their C-terminal WD40 domain (32). To delineate the region in TLE3 that mediates interaction with the eh1 motif in Tbx18 and Tbx15, we performed immunofluorescence experiments in HEK293 cells expressing the HA-tagged WD40 domain of TLE3 in the presence or absence of myc-tagged Tbx18 or Tbx15. When expressed alone, the WD40 domain of TLE3 is distributed in the cytoplasm as it lacks a functional NLS. Coexpression of Tbx18 or Tbx15 led to nuclear translocation of the WD40 domain (Fig. 6D), an effect that was not observed following coexpression of Tbx18 or Tbx15 protein with a mutant eh1 motif, confirming the specificity of the interaction. Next, we determined whether the interaction of Tbx18 or Tbx15 with Groucho is required for transcriptional repression. Therefore, we compared the repression activities of wild-type and eh1 mutant versions of GAL4-Tbx18 and GAL4-Tbx15 on the 5xGal4UAS-tk-luciferase-reporter in HeLa cells. Wild-type and eh1 mutant proteins were expressed at equal levels (data not shown). Both eh1 mutant proteins exhibit an approximate 50% reduction of repressor activity (Fig. 6E) with a release of repression from 17.8 ± 3.4 to 31.4 ± 2.1% for GAL4-Tbx18 and 35.0 ± 0.0 to 64.3 ± 4.7% for GAL4-Tbx15. We conclude that a major part of the repression activity of Tbx18 and Tbx15 is mediated through the eh1 motif. Overexpression of Groucho protein failed to increase repression by Tbx18 and Tbx15 wild-type proteins (data not shown), indicating that abundant endogenous expression in mammalian cell lines was sufficient to saturate the repression (33).
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NLS protein in HEK293 cells (Fig. 7B).
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To address whether Tbx18 is also sufficient to repress endogenous Nppa expression, we performed overexpression experiments in HL-1 cardiomyocytes (22). Since we achieved only low transfection efficiency of these cells, we enriched transfected cells by coexpression of a cell surface marker followed by magnetic cell separation. Endogenous Nppa expression levels were measured by quantitative RT-PCR. As shown in Fig. 7F, transfection of Tbx18 resulted in a weak but significant decrease of Nppa mRNA to 81.5 ± 8.4% of the control. As a positive control, we expressed the known repressor of Nppa, Tbx2 (18, 38), which resulted in a stronger repression of Nppa mRNA expression (56.1 ± 8.4%).
Tbx18 Represses Delta-like 1 Expression in Somites—Tbx6, in cooperation with canonical Wnt signaling, directly activates the presomitic expression of the Notch ligand Delta-like 1 (Dll1) (19, 41, 42). After segmentation, the expression of Dll1 is confined to the posterior halves of epithelialized somites, which is complementary to Tbx18 expression that is restricted to anterior somite halves. We therefore hypothesized that Tbx18 antagonizes Tbx6-mediated activation to restrict the expression of Dll1 to the posterior somite compartment. We failed to detect ectopic expression of Dll1 in anterior somite halves in Tbx18-/- embryos; however, coexpression of the closely related Tbx22 gene in newly formed somites may compensate for the loss of Tbx18 function in this context (43). Restriction of Tbx18 expression to anterior somite halves is achieved by the transcription factor Uncx4.1 in posterior somite halves (13). In Uncx4.1 mutant embryos, Tbx18 expression is found throughout the somites, providing a natural situation to study the effect of ectopic Tbx18 on Dll1 somitic expression. Indeed, we found a down-regulation of Dll1 expression and of the Notch target gene Hey1 (44) in Uncx4.1-/- somites (Fig. 8A), suggesting that Tbx18 represses Dll1, and thus, Notch signaling in this tissue. To confirm this possibility at the molecular level, we performed reporter assays in HeLa cells using a luciferase reporter under control of the Dll1 msd upstream enhancer fused to the Dll1 minimal promoter (pKS.msd-luciferase (Fig. 8B) (Ref. 19)). The 1.4-kbp msd fragment is sufficient to direct Dll1 transcription to the presomitic mesoderm, the somites, and the dermomyotome (45) and contains six T half-sites as well as four Tcf/Lef binding sites that are required to mediate this activity in vivo (19). Neither expression of Tbx6 at various concentrations (0-250 ng) nor of Tcf1e together with
-catenin (both 100 ng) stimulated the activity of the msd-luciferase reporter in our experiments. Cotransfection of Tbx6 and Tcf1e/
-catenin dose-dependently activated the reporter (Fig. 8C) in accordance with previous data (19). In contrast, Tbx18 alone repressed the basal reporter activity moderately and was unable to synergistically activate the msd reporter when coexpressed with Tcf1e/
-catenin (Fig. 8C). In addition, Tbx18 efficiently antagonized the activation mediated by Tbx6 together with Tcf1e and
-catenin (Fig. 8C) and was also able to compete with an even stronger synergistic activation caused by an activator form of Tbx6 (Tbx6-VP16) in combination with Tcf1e and
-catenin (Fig. 8D). An activator form of Tbx18 (Tbx18-VP16) caused transcriptional activation of the reporter gene, arguing that the effects of Tbx18 on the msd promoter are caused by competitive binding to T half-sites and not merely by protein interactions (data not shown).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Repression by Tbx18 through Antagonizing T-box Activators in Somite and Heart Development—Mice carrying a null allele of Tbx18 die shortly after birth due to severe malformations of the axial skeleton, a phenotype that was traced to the function of Tbx18 in maintaining anterior-posterior somite polarity (13). Anterior-posterior somite polarity is established in the anterior presomitic mesoderm by the combined action of Mesp2 and Notch-Delta signaling (46). The latter induces expression of Uncx4.1 in posterior somite halves (47) that is required to restrict the expression of Tbx18 to anterior somite halves (13). In Tbx18-/- embryos, Uncx4.1 expression gradually expands into anterior somite halves, suggesting inhibition of Uncx4.1 activation by Tbx18 (13). To date, the lack of clarity on the mode of target gene regulation by Tbx18 has made it difficult to hypothesize on the molecular pathways controlled by Tbx18 in the somitic mesoderm. Our studies have now shown that Tbx18 is likely to act as a transcriptional repressor in vivo. Expansion of Uncx4.1 expression in Tbx18-/- somites is therefore compatible with a direct transcriptional repression of Uncx4.1, and alternatively, with an indirect inhibition of Uncx4.1 activation by repression of components of the Delta/Notch signaling pathway. The first possibility seems unlikely given the relatively slow expansion of Uncx4.1 expression in Tbx18-/- somites. However, coexpression of Tbx22, a closely related Tbx gene, in anterior somite halves of newly formed somites (43) might prevent an immediate derepression of Uncx4.1 transcription. The second possibility gains support from our data on the transcriptional control of the Dll1 promoter in vitro and from analysis of molecular changes accompanying Tbx18 overexpression in Uncx4.1-/- embryos. Tbx18 abrogates the Tbx6-mediated activation of the Dll1 promoter, most likely by competition for T half-sites in vitro, and ectopic expression of Tbx18 in posterior somites coincides with the down-regulation of Dll1 and Notch-Delta signaling in vivo. Expression of Tbx6 mRNA and protein is restricted to the presomitic mesoderm (42), arguing for a role of Tbx6 in activating rather than maintaining somitic expression of Dll1. Tbx18 might therefore counteract Tbx6 to restrict Dll1 expression to posterior stripes in the anterior presomitic mesoderm and/or might antagonize an as yet unidentified somitic activator to restrict Dll1 to posterior somite halves. As a third possibility, expansion of Uncx4.1 expression in Tbx18-/- embryos may merely reflect immigration of cells from posterior into anterior somite halves due to loss of adhesion or repulsion mechanisms.
The Nppa promoter is subject to a spatially complex pattern of regulation in which both activating and repressing T-box proteins may bind and compete for the same set of binding sites. Nppa expression in the chamber myocardium of the heart is established by synergistic action of Nkx2-5, Gata4, and Tbx5 transcriptional activators (4-6). Exclusion of Nppa expression from regions of the primary myocardium in the atrioventricular canal and the outflow tract is achieved by binding of the Tbx2 repressor to T half-sites in the Nppa promoter, competing Tbx5 activation (18, 38). Our studies show that Tbx18 might play a similar role in the sinus horn mesenchyme that is also devoid of Nppa expression. However, repression of Nppa expression in the posterior pole of the heart does not exclusively depend on the presence of Tbx18 but also on the absence of Nkx2-5 (15), providing an additional level of safety to exclude Nppa expression from this area.
Our analysis of Nppa repression by Tbx18 sheds light onto the molecular control of target site specificity of T-box genes. Tbx5 and Tbx18 are members of distantly related Tbx subfamilies, arguing for diverse modes of DNA and protein interactions. However, regulation of the same promoter clearly indicates that both proteins bind to the same DNA binding sites, a situation that is similarly found for Tbx6 and Tbx18 in the Dll1 promoter. To date, all T-box proteins analyzed, including Tbx15 and Tbx18 tested here, recognize DNA binding sites containing a T half-site 5'-AGGTGTGAA-3'. Earlier reports and this study suggest that in vitro selected (strong) binding sites are not necessarily present in the genome as such but that combinations of two or more (less conserved) T half-sites including their particular orientation and spacing influence DNA binding specificity in vivo (1-3, 28, 34). Along this line, we failed to detect the selected perfect binding sites of Tbx15 and Tbx18 in the mouse genome. Since binding affinities of Tbx18 and Tbx15 for paired T half-sites was considerably higher than for a single half-site, a cooperative mode of DNA binding seems mandatory. Indeed, we found that Tbx15 and Tbx18 are able to dimerize in the absence of DNA in vitro and in cells, providing a mechanism to stabilize weak monomer-DNA interactions. Moreover, the enhanced dimerization by the addition of antibody greatly increased the DNA binding affinity, an effect that was previously reported for other T-box proteins (1, 3). The available DNA-protein co-crystal structure of the Xenopus Brachyury homolog Xbra together with the palindromic binding site has implicated critical residues of the T-domain that mediate dimerization (27). Most of these residues are conserved in Tbx18 and Tbx15 (data not shown). However, the binding to paired T half-sites of inverted or directly repeated orientations implies an alternative quaternary structure of the protein dimer-DNA-complex, arguing for additional dimerization interfaces in Tbx18 and Tbx15 proteins. Furthermore, our finding that flanking N- and C-terminal protein regions confer high affinity DNA binding suggests that regions outside the T-box participate in dimer formation.
An additional level of target specificity might be achieved by protein-protein interaction with other DNA binding transcription factors. Our study has shown that Tbx18 can directly bind to the homeodomain transcription factor Nkx2-5 and the zinc finger protein Gata4 in vitro as well as in mammalian cells, two proteins that were previously identified as binding partners of Tbx1, Tbx2, Tbx5, and Tbx20 (4-7, 10). During heart development, transcription factors of all three families cooperatively regulate cardiac gene expression programs.
We found that the binding to Nkx2-5 and Gata4 is mediated by the T-box and (more weakly) by the N-terminal region, indicating that both transcription factors either bind to two different sites in the T-box and N-terminal region or bind within the short stretch of overlapping amino acids present in both fusion proteins of Tbx18 (aa 148-157). This is in line with previous studies that have shown that interaction of Tbx5 and Nkx2-5 proteins is mediated both by the N-terminal region outside the T-box as well as by the N-terminal part of the T-box (4). The high conservation of the T-box domain of different family members might thus not only be a prerequisite for shared DNA binding specificity but also for conserved binding to protein interaction partners. Nonetheless, it is likely that specific protein interaction domains are present in the regions outside the T-box, providing an additional level of specificity in target gene recognition by T-box transcription factors.
Repression by Recruitment of Corepressors—Transcription factors of various classes including basic helix-loop-helix, Tcf/HMG (high mobility group), homeodomain, runt domain, and zinc finger domain proteins have previously been reported to function as Groucho-dependent repressors (31). Groucho proteins are known to recruit histone deacetylases (48, 49) that remove acetyl groups from histone tails, thus rendering the chromatin inaccessible for transcriptional activation. Our analysis provides the first evidence that this mode of repression also extends to members of the T-box family of transcription factors. The eh1 motif that mediates binding to the WD40 domain of Groucho was not only identified at a conserved N-terminal position within the vertebrate homologues of Tbx18, Tbx15, Tbx22, and Tbx20 but also in the ancestral Amphioxus Tbx15/18/22 protein as well as in the Drosophila Tbx20 homologues Midline and H15 (data not shown). This evolutionary conservation strongly implies that all T-box proteins within the Tbx18/15/22/20 branch of the Tbx1 subfamily act as Groucho-dependent repressors. Widespread expression of vertebrate Groucho proteins is compatible with a corepressor function for these T-box proteins in diverse developmental contexts. However, it will be important to determine the functional significance of this interaction in vivo since Groucho recruitment might be tissue-specific as shown for the transcription factor Runx3 (50).
Mutation of the eh1 motif resulted in only partial loss of Tbx18 and Tbx15 repression activities, indicating the presence of additional repression domains, i.e. interfaces for recruitment of other corepressors. In the case of Tbx15, a recruitment motif for C-terminal-binding protein (CtBP) is present at amino acid positions 39-43. Two members of this corepressor family in the mouse, CtBP1 and CtBP2, also interact with histone deacetylase (HDAC) (51), suggesting an additional mode of gene silencing by Tbx15 that can be experimentally explored in the future. The mode of repression exerted by Tbx15 and Tbx18 is clearly distinct from that of the T-box factors Tbx2 and Tbx3 since the C-terminal motif that mediates repression by direct binding to HDAC1 is not found in Tbx15 and Tbx18 (52). Restriction of Tbx15 and Tbx18 function to transcriptional repression is clearly precocious at this point. The close relative Tbx20 was reported to contain both activation and repression domains, arguing for a more complicated context-dependent transcriptional modulation by T-box proteins (7).
Functional Redundancy of Tbx15 and Tbx18—Tbx15 and Tbx18 form a pair of structurally related T-box proteins. Sequence conservation between Tbx18 and Tbx15 amounts to 92% in the T-box region and extends to short stretches in the less well conserved N- and C-terminal domains, suggesting conservation of important functional interfaces for DNA and protein binding. Indeed, our biochemical analysis of Tbx15 and Tbx18 has demonstrated identical DNA binding properties, subcellular localization, and Groucho-dependent transcriptional repression activities. Together with our finding that Tbx18 and Tbx15 hetero- and homodimerize, this indicates that the two proteins are likely to regulate a similar set of targets when coexpressed in one tissue. Although Tbx15 and Tbx18 show highly specific and largely non-overlapping expression during mouse development (39, 53), they are coexpressed in the proximal region of the developing limb bud. Lack of defects in the appendicular skeleton of Tbx18-/- mice and mild phenotypic changes in Tbx15-/- limbs might thus indicate functional redundancy in the development of this structure.
This biochemical equivalence group is likely to include Tbx22, the third member of the Tbx15/18/22 subgroup in the Tbx1 subgroup of murine T-box genes. The T-box of Tbx22 is highly related to those of Tbx15 and Tbx18, exerting similar DNA binding preference to T half-sites, and also acts as a transcriptional repressor in reporter assays (54). Coexpression of Tbx18 and Tbx22 in anterior halves of epithelial somites suggests functional redundancy in anterior-posterior somite patterning and may explain the delayed expansion of posterior somite fates in Tbx18-/- embryos (13, 39, 43). Phenotypic characterization of compound mutants of Tbx15, Tbx18, and Tbx22 will clarify functional redundancy of these T-box family members in vivo.
As a single copy representative of the subgroup is present in urochordates (Tbx15/18/22 of Ciona intestinalis) and in cephalochordates (Branchiostoma floridae Tbx15/18/22) (55, 56), the three vertebrate genes probably arose from a chordate-specific precursor by two gene duplication events. Evidence suggests that basic transcriptional properties of the members of this subgroup have been preserved throughout vertebrate evolution. Functional specificity may have been acquired by unique expression domains and by new protein interactions outside the T-box region.
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This article was selected as a Paper of the Week. ![]()
1 To whom correspondence should be addressed: Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, Institute for Molecular Biology, OE5250, Carl-Neuberg-Str. 1, D-30625 Hannover, Germany. Tel.: 49-511-5324017; Fax: 49-511-5324283; E-mail: kispert.andreas{at}mh-hannover.de.
2 The abbreviations used are: aa, amino acids; eh1, engrailed homology 1; NLS, nuclear localization sequence; TLE, transducin-like enhancer of split; HA, hemagglutinin; GST, glutathione S-transferase; EMSA, electrophoretic mobility shift assay; RT, reverse transcription; CtBP, C-terminal-binding protein; N, N-terminal domain; C, C-terminal domain; T, T-domain. ![]()
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