Glucokinase (GK) and glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase) regulate rate-limiting reactions in the physiologically opposed metabolic cascades, glycolysis and gluconeogenesis, respectively. Expression of these genes is conversely regulated in the liver in response to fasting and feeding. We explored the mechanism of transcriptional regulation of these genes by nutritional condition and found that reciprocal function of HNF-4 and Foxo1 plays an important role in this process. In the GK gene regulation, Foxo1 represses HNF-4-potentiated transcription of the gene, whereas it synergizes with HNF-4 in activating the G6Pase gene transcription. These opposite actions of Foxo1 concomitantly take place in the cells under no insulin stimulus, and such gene-specific action was promoter context-dependent. Interestingly, HNF-4-binding elements (HBEs) in the GK and G6Pase promoters were required both for the insulin-stimulated GK gene activation and insulin-mediated G6Pase gene repression. Indeed, mouse in vivo imaging showed that mutating the HBEs in the GK and G6Pase promoters significantly impaired their reactivity to the nutritional states, even in the presence of intact Foxo1-binding sites (insulin response sequences). Thus, in the physiological response of the GK and G6Pase genes to fasting/feeding conditions, Foxo1 distinctly decodes the promoter context of these genes and differently modulates the function of HBE, which then leads to opposite outcomes of gene transcription.The liver plays an important role in maintaining plasma glucose homeostasis by adjusting a delicate balance between hepatic glucose utilization and production via the glycolytic and gluconeogenic pathways. These physiologically opposed cascades are regulated, at least in part, at the transcriptional level of the glucokinase (GK) 2 and glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase) genes, which catalyze the first and last rate-limiting steps in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis, respectively.
The cerebellum develops from the rhombic lip of the rostral hindbrain and is organized by fibroblast growth factor 8 (FGF8) expressed by the isthmus. Here we report characterization of Irx2, a member of the Iroquois (Iro) and Irx class of homeobox genes, that is expressed in the presumptive cerebellum. When Irx2 is misexpressed with Fgf8a in the chick midbrain, the midbrain develops into cerebellum in conjunction with repression of Otx2 and induction of Gbx2. During this event, signaling by the FGF8 and mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase cascade modulates the activity of Irx2 by phosphorylation. Our data identify a link between the isthmic organizer and Irx2, thereby shedding light on the roles of Iro and Irx genes, which are conserved in both vertebrates and invertebrates.
Genomic imprinting, the phenomenon in which alleles of genes are expressed differentially depending on their parental origins, has important consequences for mammalian development, and disturbance of normal imprinting leads to abnormal embryogenesis and some inherited diseases and is also associated with various cancers. In the context of screening for novel imprinted genes on human chromosome 19q13.4 with mouse A9 hybrids, we identified a maternal allele-specific methylated CpG island in exon 1 of paternally expressed imprinted gene 3 (PEG3), a gene that exhibits paternal allele-specific expression. Because PEG3 expression is downregulated in some gliomas and glioma cell lines, despite high-level expression in normal brain tissues, we investigated whether the loss of PEG3 expression is related to epigenetic modifications involving DNA methylation. We found monoallelic expression of PEG3 in all normal brain tissues examined and five of nine glioma cell lines that had both unmethylated and methylated alleles; the remaining four glioma cell lines exhibited gain of imprinting with hypermethylated alleles. In addition, treatment of glioma cell lines with the DNA demethylating agent 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine reversed the silencing of PEG3 biallelically. In this article, we report that the epigenetic silencing of PEG3 expression in glioma cell lines depends on aberrant DNA methylation of an exonic CpG island, suggesting that PEG3 contributes to glioma carcinogenesis in certain cases.
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