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Published ahead of print on October 23, 2009
Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Biol. 2009, doi:10.1165/rcmb.2009-0149OC
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Submitted on April 30, 2009
Accepted on October 22, 2009

Multiple Mechanisms Influence Regulation of the CFTR Gene Promoter

Marzena A Lewandowska1, Fabricio F Costa2, Jared M Bischof2, Sarah H Williams3, Marcelo B Soares2, and Ann Harris1*

1 Children's Memorial Research Center, Pediatrics, Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine, Human Molecular Genetic Program, Chicago, Illinois, United States, 2 Children's Memorial Research Center, Pediatrics, Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine, Cancer Biology and Epigenomics Program, Chicago, Illinois, United States, 3 Paediatric Molecular Genetics, Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ann-harris{at}northwestern.edu.

The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene is driven by a promoter that cannot alone account for the temporal and tissue-specific regulation of the gene. This has led to the search for additional regulatory elements that cooperate with the basal promoter to achieve coordinated expression. We previously identified two alternative upstream exons of the gene that were mutually exclusive with the first exon and one of which showed temporal regulation in the human and sheep lung. We now demonstrate that this alternative splice product generates a stable protein, which initiates translation at an ATG in exon 4 and thus lacks the N-terminus of CFTR. The other splice variant inhibits translation of the protein. In a search for the promoter utilized by the upstream exons, we identified a novel element that contributes to the activity of the basal CFTR promoter in airway epithelial cells, but does not function independently. Finally, we demonstrated that in primary airway cells, skin fibroblasts, and both airway and intestinal cell lines, the CFTR promoter is unmethylated, irrespective of CFTR expression status. Thus methylation is not the main cause of inactivation of CFTR transcription.


Key words: CFTR promoter • Developmental regulation • Methylation • Epigenetics







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