C/EBPα regulates human adiponectin gene transcription through an intronic enhancer

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Abstract

Adiponectin is an adipose-derived hormone that enhances insulin sensitivity and plays an important role in regulating energy homeostasis. Here, we demonstrate that the DNA encoding the first intron of the human adiponectin gene contains an intronic enhancer that regulates adiponectin gene expression in an adipose tissue-specific manner. Insertion of the DNA encoding the first intron into reporter constructs containing the proximal adiponectin promoter (Pro-Int1-Luc) resulted in a 20-fold increase in activity relative to the promoter alone in 3T3-L1 adipocytes. Coexpression of CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein (C/EBP)α increased luciferase activity of the Pro-Int1-Luc construct ∼75-fold but had no effect on the constructs containing the proximal adiponectin promoter alone. At least eight potential C/EBPα response elements are located between +3000 to +10000 nucleotides within the DNA encoding the first intron, including a 34-bp core sequence for the intronic enhancer that contains three tandem C/EBPα response elements. However, the intronic enhancer is not conserved between human and mouse. Overexpression or siRNA-mediated knock-down of endogenous C/EBPα significantly increased or decreased, respectively, adiponectin mRNA levels in differentiated human Chub-87 adipocytes, while neither C/EBPβ nor C/EBPδ significantly affected adiponectin expression in mature adipocytes. Thus, C/EBPα is a key transcription factor for full activation of human adiponectin gene transcription in mature adipocytes through interaction with response elements in the intronic enhancer. © 2005 by the American Diabetes Association.

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Qiao, L., MacLean, P. S., Schaack, J., Orlicky, D. J., Darimont, C., Pagliassotti, M., … Shao, J. (2005). C/EBPα regulates human adiponectin gene transcription through an intronic enhancer. Diabetes, 54(6), 1744–1754. https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.54.6.1744

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