4.5 Article

Functional analysis of peroxisome-proliferator-responsive element motifs in genes of fatty acid-binding proteins

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 382, Issue -, Pages 239-245

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20031340

Keywords

Dynabead streptavidin solid-phase method; fatty acid-binding protein; peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptor; peroxisome-proliferator-response element; reporter gene assay

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Retinoic acids and long-chain fatty acids are lipophilic agonists of nuclear receptors such as RXRs (retinoic X receptors) and PPARs (peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptors) respectively. These agonists are also ligands of intracellular lipid-binding proteins, which include FABPs (fatty acid-binding proteins). We reported previously that L (liver-type)-FABP targets fatty acids to the nucleus of hepatocytes and affects PPARalpha activation, which binds together with an RXR subtype to a PPRE (peroxisome-proliferator-responsive element). In the present study, we first determined the optimal combination of murine PPAR/RXR subtypes for binding to known murine FABP-PPREs and to those found by computer search and then tested their in vitro functionality. We show that all PPARs bind to L-FABP-PPRE, PPARalpha, PPARgamma(1) and PPARgamma(2) to A (adipocyte-type)-FABP-PPRE. All PPAR/RXR heterodimers transactivate L-FABP-PPRE, best are combinations of PPARalpha with RXRalpha or RXRgamma. In contrast, PPARalpha hetero- dimers do not transactivate A-FABP-PPRE, best combinations are of PPARgamma(1) with RXRalpha and RXRgamma, and of PPARgamma(2) with all RXR subtypes. We found that the predicted E (epidermal-type)- and H (heart-type)-FABP-PPREs are not activated by any PPAR/RXR combination without or with the PPAR pan-agonist bezafibrate. In the same way, C2C12 myoblasts transfected with promoter fragments of E-FABP and H-FABP genes containing putative PPREs are also not activated through stimulation of PPARs with bezafibrate applied to the cells. These results demonstrate that only PPREs of L- and A-FABP promoters are functional, and that binding of PPAR/RXR heterodimers to a PPRE in vitro does not necessarily predict transactivation.

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