The transcriptional repressor REST is a critical regulator of the neurosecretory phenotype
570
Transcription, Genetic
phenotype
neurosecretory
Social and Behavioral Sciences
PC12 Cells
Norepinephrine
03 medical and health sciences
Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Animals
rest
Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis
repressor
0303 health sciences
critical
Neurosecretion
Gene Expression Profiling
Secretory Vesicles
Life Sciences
transcriptional
Recombinant Proteins
Rats
Repressor Proteins
Phenotype
Gene Expression Regulation
regulator
CMMB
Calcium Channels
Transcription Factors
DOI:
10.1111/j.1471-4159.2006.04010.x
Publication Date:
2006-07-28T09:22:26Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
AbstractRelease of distinct cellular cargoes in response to specific stimuli is a process fundamental to all higher eukaryotes and controlled by the regulated secretory pathway (RSP). However, the mechanism by which genes involved in the RSP are selectively expressed, leading to the establishment and appropriate functioning of regulated secretion remaining largely unknown. Using the rat pheochromocytoma cell line PC12, we provide evidence that, by controlling expression of many genes involved in the RSP, the transcriptional repressor REST can regulate this pathway and hence the neurosecretory phenotype. Introduction of REST transgenes into PC12 cells leads to the repression of many genes, the products of which are involved in regulated secretion. Moreover, chromatin immunoprecipitation assays show that many of the repressed genes recruit the recombinant REST protein to RE1 sites within their promoters and abrogation of REST function leads to reactivation of these transcripts. In addition to the observed transcriptional effects, PC12 cells expressing REST have fewer secretory granules and a reduction in the ability to store and release noradrenaline. Furthermore, an important trigger for synaptic release, influx of calcium through voltage‐operated calcium channels, is compromised. This is the first demonstration of a transcription factor that directly controls expression of many major components of the RSP and provides further insight into the function of REST.
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CITATIONS (41)
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