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Harvard Medical School and Gastrointestinal Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114
A poorly
defined negative feedback loop decreases transcription of the
L-histidine decarboxylase (HDC) gene. To help understand this regulation, we have studied the effect of HDC protein expression on HDC gene transcription in transfected AGS-B cells. Expression of the
rat HDC protein inhibited HDC promoter activity in a dose-dependent fashion. The region of the HDC promoter mediating this inhibitory effect corresponded to a previously defined gastrin and extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK)-1 response element. Overexpression of the
HDC protein reduced nuclear factor binding in this region. Experiments
employing specific histamine receptor agonists indicated that the
inhibitory effect was not dependent on histamine production, and
studies with the HDC inhibitor
-fluoromethylhistidine revealed that
inhibition was unrelated to enzyme activity. Instead, an enzymatically
inactive region at the amino terminal of the HDC enzyme (residues
1-271) was shown to mediate inhibition. Fluorescent chimeras
containing this domain were not targeted to the nucleus, arguing
against specific inhibition of the HDC transcription machinery. Instead, we found that overexpression of HDC protein decreased ERK
protein levels and ERK activity and that the inhibitory effect of HDC
protein could be overcome by overexpression of ERK1. These data suggest
a novel feedback-inhibitory role for amino terminal sequences of the
HDC protein.
extracellular signal-related kinase; gastrin; gastrin response element-binding protein
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