Abstract

The amylin (IAPP) and insulin genes are coexpressed in the pancreatic beta-cell and share related promoter elements that may bind similar islet transcription factors. The observation that these promoter elements contain AT-rich subdomains suggests that homeobox proteins may be important for the regulation of both insulin and amylin gene transcription. We show here that the LIM domain homeobox protein isl-1 activates the rat amylin promoter in both fibroblast and islet cell lines. Mutation of the rAMY promoter TAAT motifs was associated with a marked reduction in both basal and isl-1 -dependent transcriptional activity. The isl-1 homeodomain binds to the AT-rich AMY element (-156 to -137) in the human amylin (hAMY) gene promoter, and electrophoretic mobility shift assay experiments using isl-1 specific antiserum detected the formation of an hAMY-isl-1 complex using nuclear extract from InR1 -G9 islet cells. Although isl-1 binds to both the insulin and amylin gene promoter elements in vitro, these sequences display marked differences in their relative transcriptional properties when ligated adjacent to a heterologous promoter and transfected into InR1 -G9 islet cells. The insulin gene E2 sequence that binds isl-1 (-230 to -208) functions as a negative element, whereas the hAMY sequence activates the thymidine kinase promoter in islet, but not nonislet, cell lines. Transfection of isl-1-depleted isl-1 (AS)InR1 -G9 cell lines demonstrated that the E2 element continued to repress thymidine kinase promoter activity, whereas the positive transcriptional activity mediated by the AMY element was considerably reduced in isl-1 (AS)-InR1-G9 cell lines. These dat2 demonstrate that highly similar elements in islet hormone gene promoters display differential functional properties and support a role for the isl-1 homeodomain protein in the regulation of amylin, but not insulin, gene transcription.

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