Nucleoprotein complexes that regulate gene expression in adipocyte differentiation: direct participation of c-fos

1987 
Abstract Adipocyte differentiation is accompanied by the transcriptional activation of many new genes, including a putative lipid-binding protein termed adipocyte P2 (aP2). The aP2 gene contains a regulatory element (FSE2) 124 bases 5′ to its start of transcription. This element binds nuclear factors in sequence-specific and differentiation-dependent fashion as determined by altered mobility in gel retardation assays. Deletion analysis of promoter-linked transfection assays and competition of these constructions in cells with a synthetic FSE2 element suggest that trans -acting factors bind to this region and act as negative regulators of aP2 gene activity in preadipocytes. c- fos appears to participate directly in this nucleoprotein complex, as demonstrated by the ability of antibodies to c- fos to disrupt specific binding of factors to the FSE2 sequence but not to factor-binding sequences from several other genes. Antibodies to c- fos specifically immunoprecipitate protein complexes covalently bound to FSE2 DNA via UV cross-linking.
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