
Human Endothelin-Converting Enzyme-1β mRNA Expression Is Regulated by an Alternative Promoter
Author(s) -
Heiko Funke-Kaiser,
Hans Dieter Orzechowski,
Marleen Richter,
Martin Paul
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of cardiovascular pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.762
H-Index - 100
eISSN - 1533-4023
pISSN - 0160-2446
DOI - 10.1097/00005344-199800001-00004
Subject(s) - biology , alternative splicing , microbiology and biotechnology , promoter , gene isoform , transfection , endothelins , exon , intron , start codon , reporter gene , gene , messenger rna , untranslated region , luciferase , gene expression , endothelin 1 , genetics , receptor
The central step in endothelin biosynthesis is site-specific cleavage of big endothelins by endothelin-converting enzymes (ECEs). ECE-1 is a membrane-bound metalloprotease, predominantly but not exclusively expressed in endothelial cells. ECE-1 is expressed in two mRNA isoforms, termed alpha and beta, which differ only in the 5'-terminal regions but are functionally very similar when expressed in vitro. The structure of the human ECE-1 gene suggests either alternative splicing or alternative promoters as underlying mechanisms of mRNA isoform expression. We have previously shown that the alpha-upstream region exerts promoter activity in endothelial cells. To clarify whether the 5'-untranslated region upstream of exon 3, which contains the beta-specific sequence, acts as an alternative transcriptional promoter, we sequenced and cloned 1,206 bp upstream of the beta-specific translation initiation codon in a luciferase reporter vector. After transfection, we detected strong promoter activity in primary cultured endothelial cells (HU-VECs, BAECs) but only marginal activity in the endothelial cell line ECV304 and in CHO cells. Maximal promoter activity was observed with the full-length construct, 1206 (136% of the SV40 promoter activity in BAECs). Transfection of serial deletion mutants indicated at least three major regulatory regions within the promoter. Our results are consistent with cell type-restricted action of the beta-promoter and, in conjunction with the previously reported transcriptional start sites, clearly prove the existence of an alternative beta-specific promoter located in intron 2 of the human ECE-1 gene.