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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 284: H193-H203, 2003. First published September 5, 2002; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00161.2002
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Vol. 284, Issue 1, H193-H203, January 2003

Regulation of the S100B gene by alpha 1-adrenergic stimulation in cardiac myocytes

James N. Tsoporis1, Alexander Marks2, Linda J. Van Eldik3, David O'Hanlon2, and Thomas G. Parker1

1 Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, The Toronto General Hospital Research Institute, University of Toronto, Toronto M5G 2C4; 2 Banting and Best Department of Medical Research, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5G 1L6, Canada; and 3 Drug Discovery Program and Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois 60611

We previously reported that S100B, a 20-kDa Ca2+-binding homodimer, inhibited the postinfarct myocardial hypertrophic response mediated by alpha 1-adrenergic stimulation through the protein kinase C (PKC) signaling pathway. In the present study, we examined whether the same pathway induced the S100B gene, supporting the hypothesis that S100B is a feedback negative regulator of this pathway. We transfected cultured neonatal rat cardiac myocytes with a luciferase reporter gene driven by the maximal human S100B promoter and progressively shorter segments of this promoter sequentially deleted from the 5' end. We identified a basic promoter essential for transcription spanning 162 bp upstream of the transcription initiation site and positive (at -782/-162 and -6,689/-4,463) and negative (at -4,463/-782) myocyte-selective regulatory elements. We showed that the basic and maximal S100B promoters were activated specifically by alpha 1-adrenergic agonists through the alpha 1A-adrenergic receptor, but not by any other trophic hormonal stimuli. The activation of the S100B promoter was mediated through the PKC signaling pathway. Transcription enhancer factor-1 (TEF-1) and related to TEF-1 (RTEF-1) influenced transcription from the maximal, but not the basic, promoter implicating active MCAT elements upstream from the basic promoter. Acting in opposing fashions, TEF-1 transrepressed the S100B promoter and RTEF-1 transactivated the promoter. Our results suggest that alpha 1-adrenergic stimulation induces the S100B gene after myocardial infarction through the PKC signaling pathway and that this induction is modulated by TEF-1 and RTEF-1.

norepinephrine; TEF-1





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