An Ebox element in the proximal Gata4 promoter is required for Gata4 expression in vivo.


  • Publication date : 2011-12-16

Reference

Boulende Sab A, Bouchard MF, Béland M, Prud'homme B, Souchkova O, Viger RS, Pilon N. An Ebox element in the proximal Gata4 promoter is required for Gata4 expression in vivo. PLoS ONE. 2011;6:e29038. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0029038. PubMed PMID: 22174950.

Additional information

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Keywords

animals exons female fertility gata4 transcription factor gene expression regulation gene targeting introns male mice mice, knockout mutation nucleotide motifs ovary phenotype promoter regions, genetic rna, messenger testis transcription, genetic

Abstract

GATA4 is an essential transcription factor required for the development and function of multiple tissues, including a major role in gonadogenesis. Despite its crucial role, the molecular mechanisms that regulate Gata4 expression in vivo remain poorly understood. We recently found that the Gata4 gene is expressed as multiple transcripts with distinct 5' origins. These co-expressed alternative transcripts are generated by different non-coding first exons with transcripts E1a and E1b being the most prominent. Moreover, we previously showed that an Ebox element, located in Gata4 5' flanking sequences upstream of exon 1a, is important for the promoter activity of these sequences in cell lines. To confirm the importance of this element in vivo, we generated and characterized Gata4 Ebox knockout mice. Quantitative PCR analyses realized on gonads, heart and liver at three developmental stages (embryonic, pre-pubertal and adult) revealed that the Ebox mutation leads to a robust and specific decrease (up to 89%) of Gata4 E1a transcript expression in all tissues and stages examined. However, a detailed characterization of the gonads revealed normal morphology and GATA4 protein levels in these mutants. Our qPCR data further indicate that this outcome is most likely due to the presence of Gata4 E1b mRNA, whose expression levels were not decreased by the Ebox mutation. In conclusion, our work clearly confirms the importance of the proximal Ebox element and suggests that adequate GATA4 protein expression is likely protected by a compensation mechanism between Gata4 E1a and E1b transcripts operating at the translational level.