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Reduced Expression of Nuclear Cyclic Adenosine 5′-Monophospate Response Element-Binding Proteins and IFN-γ Promoter Function in Disease Due to an Intracellular Pathogen
Author(s) -
Buka Samten,
Paritosh Ghosh,
Ae-Kyung Yi,
Stephen E. Weis,
David Lakey,
Rivkah Gonsky,
Usha R. Pendurthi,
Benjamin Wizel,
Yueru Zhang,
Ming Zhang,
Jianhua Gong,
Marilyn Fernandez,
Hassan Safi,
Ramakrishna Vankayalapati,
Howard A. Young,
Peter F. Barnes
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.168.7.3520
Subject(s) - creb , microbiology and biotechnology , transfection , promoter , biology , repressor , response element , interferon gamma , mycobacterium tuberculosis , nuclear protein , gene expression , cell culture , immunology , transcription factor , gene , tuberculosis , cytokine , biochemistry , medicine , genetics , pathology
Mycobacterium tuberculosis-induced IFN-gamma protein and mRNA expression have been shown to be reduced in tuberculosis patients, compared with healthy tuberculin reactors. To determine whether this decrease was associated with reduced activity of the IFN-gamma promoter, we first studied binding of nuclear proteins to the radiolabeled proximal IFN-gamma promoter (-71 to -40 bp), using EMSAs with nuclear extracts of freshly isolated peripheral blood T cells. Nuclear extracts of T cells from most tuberculosis patients showed markedly reduced expression of proteins that bind to the proximal IFN-gamma promoter, compared with findings in nuclear extracts of T cells from healthy tuberculin reactors. These DNA-binding complexes contained CREB proteins, based on competitive EMSAs, supershift assays, and Western blotting with an anti-CREB Ab. Transient transfection of PBLs with a luciferase reporter construct under the control of the IFN-gamma promoter revealed reduced IFN-gamma promoter activity in tuberculosis patients. Transient transfection of Jurkat cells with a dominant-negative CREB repressor plasmid reduced IFN-gamma promoter activity. These data suggest that reduced expression of CREB nuclear proteins in tuberculosis patients results in decreased IFN-gamma promoter activity and reduced IFN-gamma production.

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