| Literature DB >> 22784578 |
Mariko Morita1, Megumi Nakamura, Michito Hamada, Satoru Takahashi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Deficiency of the transcription factor MafB, which is normally expressed in macrophages, can underlie cellular dysfunction associated with a range of autoimmune diseases and arteriosclerosis. MafB has important roles in cell differentiation and regulation of target gene expression; however, the mechanisms of this regulation and the identities of other transcription factors with which MafB interacts remain uncertain. Bioinformatics methods provide a valuable approach for elucidating the nature of these interactions with transcriptional regulatory elements from a large number of DNA sequences. In particular, identification of patterns of co-occurrence of regulatory cis-elements (motifs) offers a robust approach.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22784578 PMCID: PMC3287487 DOI: 10.1186/1752-0509-5-S2-S7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Syst Biol ISSN: 1752-0509
Figure 1A flow chart of the three methods
Three major steps of the analysis are involved in the methodology used.
Fifty-two down-regulated genes in macrophages from MafB deficient mice
Four patterns of predicted MafB motifs
| MafB binding sequence | MafB motif | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| tgtcta | |||
| cttttg | N=8 | CTGCTGAC | [CTG]TGCT[GC]AC |
| ccaaac | N=9 | TCTGCTGAC | [TAG][CTG]TGCT[GC]AC |
| cgtaac | N=10 | ATCTGCTGAC | [AT][TAG][CTG]TGCT[GC]AC |
| caaatt | N=11 | TATCTGCTGAC | [TA][AT][TAG][CTG]TGCT[GC]AC |
| taaagt | (N=Nucleotide) | ||
| catttc | |||
| aggatg | |||
| tgttgt | |||
| ( | |||
MafB motifs were extracted from 9 short MafB binding sequences containing 5’ AT-rich half-MARE(MARE) and validated by biochemical experimentations.
Eighteen predicted MafB binding genes
Ten functional motif candidates
| Group:Motif ID | TF | Motif (ORI ≥ 61, | |
|---|---|---|---|
| E:12-7 | MYOD, GATA-1 | CAGCCAGCAGCA | |
| G:14-4 | CdxA | AGCTTTGAAGACAG | |
| F:16-2 | GATA-2, AP2 | CGGTCTCTGGGCTCAG | (Partially same strand of 14-2) |
| A:10 | AP4/AML(10ATCT..) | ATC | Only group ”A” is extracted at Step1. |
| F:14-2 | AP2/ZID | CGGGCTCTGGGCTC | |
| F:,B:12-2 | AP2, AML-1a | AGCCCAGAGCCC | (Complementary strand of 14-2, 16-2) |
| D:10-10 | Nkx-2.5 | G | |
| E:10-3 | GATA-1 | CCTGCTCCTG | (Complementary strand of 12-7) |
| B:16-4 | AML-1a | ACAGAGGCCCAGAGGG | (Partially same strand of 12-2) |
| C:10-9 | MZF1 | GCTGGGGCAG |
The top 10 functional motif candidates were optimized by ORI and are shown with their transcription factors and the IDs in the order of their score ranking. The IDs show both the number of nucleotides and the ranking order of extracted motifs, for example, the ID of the seventh extracted motif using N = 12 is ”12-7”. The motifs were grouped by sequence similarity with the same transcription factor. Two motifs, groups A and D, were identified as the MafB motif.
Figure 2Final model and 10 motif combinations
(a) The lower left diagonal of the table (left triangle) shows deviances, and the right upper (right triangle) shows p-values in the Table of the final model. (b) An independent graph When the final model was selected (p-value < 0.001), the independent graph indicates several directional interactions of motif candidates. (c) Motif combinations Ten motif combinations were selected. (d) Motifs in the independent graph Position of motifs in the independent graph were arranged to provide an intuitive display. The graph shows that MYOD, GATA-1 and MZF1 interact directly with MafB motifs, as AP4/AML(10ATCT) and Nkx-2.5 motifs.
Combinations of functional motif candidates in each gene
| (P < 0.001) Linked motif | GATA-1 | MZF1 | AML-1a | MYOD | ZID | AP2 | CdxA | GATA-2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gene | ||||||||||
| ⋆ | ⋆ | |||||||||
| ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ||||||||
| ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | |||||
| ⋆ | ⋆ | |||||||||
| ⋆ | ||||||||||
| ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ||||||||
| ⋆ | ||||||||||
| ⋆ | ⋆ | |||||||||
| ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ||||||
| ⋆ | ||||||||||
| ⋆ | ⋆ | |||||||||
| ⋆ | ||||||||||
| ⋆ | ||||||||||
| ⋆ | ||||||||||
| ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ||||||||
| ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | |
| ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | |
| ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ | ⋆ |
Combinations in which motifs co-occurred are marked by a star ”⋆”.
The underline was MafB motif.
Figure 3Modeling of the hypothesis
A hypothesis on motif combinations was derived from the results. The dotted surrounding line indicates a MafB motif, and the double surrounding line indicates a GATA-1 (or MYOD) motif. Combinations of co-occurring functional motifs [A·C·E], [A·D·E] and [C·D·E](underline; MARE), shown by the stars in Table 5, lead to the negative or positive regulation of MafB target genes expression (Table 4; underline, MARE).
Figure 4Analysis of C1qa by a luciferase assay
Plasmids were constructed that carried the pGL4 C1qa promoter-luciferase and MafB and GATA-1 motifs. RAW264.7 cells were transfected to express each construct and the effects on luciferase reporter activity were studied. The Single GATA-1 in the C1qa promoter had little influence. Inducing MafB increased C1qa promoter driven luciferase activity. This activity was inhibited by GATA-1.