Fong T C, Wu Y, Kipps T J
Department of Medicine, University of California at San Diego Cancer Center, La Jolla 92093, USA.
J Immunol. 1996 Nov 15;157(10):4442-50.
We isolated the promoter region of the gene encoding human CD80 to examine for elements responsible for the regulated expression of this important costimulatory molecule. Using CAT reporter constructs containing a heterologous general enhancer, we demonstrate that the CD80 promoter is active in CD80-expressing Raji cells, but has no significant activity in Jurkat cells that are CD80 negative. Transcriptional activity in Raji increases as the promoter is truncated from nucleotide position -906 to -84. However, truncation of this promoter to -41 significantly decreases its activity. Within this region is one stretch of DNA that is protected in DNase I footprint analysis and that shows some sequence similarity to the NF-kappaB element. Site-specific mutation of the 5' purine-rich portion of this element (B7-RE, or B7 regulatory element) abrogates expression. Nuclear extracts prepared from Raji, or from leukemic cells induced to express CD80, form a distinct complex(es) with B7-RE in electromobility shift assays. Moreover, a consensus NF-kappaB oligonucleotide can compete with B7-RE for nuclear extract binding. However, no super-shifted bands are observed when extracts are preincubated with Abs to p50, p65, or other Rel proteins. Moreover, we find that recombinant p49 (RelB), p50, p65 (RelA), or p49/p65 heterodimers do not bind B7-RE in vitro. These data indicate that B7-RE may help govern expression of genes independent of a tissue-specific enhancer and that this element is bound by nuclear factor(s) other than those that commonly bind NF-kappaB.