Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.271, No.2, 346-352, 2000
The ovine CCAAT-enhancer binding protein delta gene: Cloning, characterization, and species-specific autoregulation
Transcription factors belonging to the CCAAT-enhancer binding protein (C/EBP) family have been implicated in the regulation of gene expression during growth, differentiation, apoptosis, and inflammation. Autoregulation is relatively common in the modulation of C/EBP gene expression and, for the human and murine C/EBP alpha, it is known that species-specific autoregulatory mechanisms operate. It is therefore essential to investigate the autoregulation of additional C/EBP genes from a wider range of different species to gauge the degree of commonality, or otherwise, which exists. As an important step towards this goal, we report here the cloning and the characterisation of the ovine C/EBP delta gene (ovC/EBP delta) and analysis of its promoter region. Transient transfection assays reveal that ovC/EBP delta acts as a transcriptional activator. Although several motifs that are characteristic of C/EBP delta genes are conserved in the ovine sequence, including the basic region, leucine zipper, and activation domains, two regions have been identified that are specifically absent in the ovine and bovine homologues. The ovC/EBP delta promoter is active in both the hepatoma Hep3B and the mammary epithelial HC11 cell lines, induced by the cytokine interleukin-6 and autoregulated by mechanisms that are potentially different from those described for the rat promoter. These results suggest that, in common with C/EBP alpha, the C/EBP delta genes may also be subject to autoregulation by distinct species-specific mechanisms.