Heterodimers of myogenin or MyoD with E12 bind an E box adjacent to a CArG3 box, which is required but not sufficient alone for muscle-specific induction of the cardiac alpha-actin promoter.
Direct and indirect pathways involving multiple cis-acting elements (E box and CArG3) mediate the induction of the cardiac alpha-actin promoter by myogenin and MyoD.
Recent studies have shown that two genes regulating myogenesis (MyoD and myogenin) are coexpressed with cardiac alpha-actin during early stages of skeletal muscle development. Myogenin and MyoD are members of a family of regulatory proteins which share a helix-loop-helix (HLH) motif required for dimerization and DNA binding. Myogenin and MyoD form heterodimers with the ubiquitous HLH protein E12 which bind cis-acting DNA elements that have an E box (CANNTG) at their core. E boxes are present in the control regions of numerous muscle-specific genes, although their functional importance in regulating many of these genes has not yet been evaluated. In this report we examine the possibility that myogenin (or MyoD) directly transactivates the cardiac alpha-actin promoter. Heterodimers of myogenin and E12 (or MyoD and E12) specifically bound a restriction fragment extending from -200 to -103 relative to the start of cardiac alpha-actin transcription. Methylation interference footprints pinpointed the site of interaction to an E box immediately adjacent to a previously identified CArG box (CArG3). Site-directed mutations to the DNA-binding site revealed that either an intact E box or an intact CArG3 is required for induction of the cardiac alpha-actin promoter in myoblasts and for transactivation by myogenin in cotransfected fibroblasts. However, deletion and substitution experiments indicate that the complex E box/CArG3 element alone does not confer muscle-specific expression to a minimal promoter. These results suggest that direct and indirect pathways involving multiple cis-acting elements mediate the induction of the cardiac alpha-actin promoter by myogenin and MyoD.
French et al. (Wed,) conducted a other in Gene regulation in skeletal muscle development. Myogenin and MyoD heterodimers with E12 was evaluated on Binding and transactivation of the cardiac alpha-actin promoter. Heterodimers of myogenin or MyoD with E12 bind an E box adjacent to a CArG3 box, which is required but not sufficient alone for muscle-specific induction of the cardiac alpha-actin promoter.