Type-1 plasminogen activator-inhibitor (PAI-1) is a major physiologic inhibitor of plasminogen activation. Incubation of HTC rat hepatoma cells with the cyclic nucleotide analogue, 8-bromo-cAMP, causes a dramatic increase in tissue-type plasminogen activator activity secondary to a 90% decrease in PAI-1 mRNA. Although 8-bromo-cAMP causes a modest decrease in PAI-1 transcription, regulation is primarily the result of a 3-fold increase in the rate of PAI-1 mRNA degradation. To determine the cis-acting sequences required for cyclic nucleotide regulation, we have stably transfected HTC cells with chimeric genes containing sequences from the rat PAI-1 cDNA and the mouse β-globin gene and examined the effect of cyclic nucleotides on the decay rate of these transcripts. The mRNA transcribed from the β-globin gene is stable and not cyclic nucleotide-regulated, whereas the transcript from a construct containing the β-globin coding region and the PAI-1 3'- untranslated region (UTR) is destabilized in the presence of 8-bromo-cAMP, suggesting that this response is mediated by sequences in the PAI-1 3'-UTR. Analyses by deletion of sequences from this chimeric construct indicate that, whereas more than one region of the PAI-1 3'-UTR can confer cyclic nucleotide responsiveness, the 3'-most 134-nucleotide sequence alone is sufficient to do so. Insertion of PAI-1 sequences within the β-globin 3'-UTR confirms that the 3'-most 134 nucleotides of PAI-1 mRNA can confer cyclic nucleotide regulation of stability on a heterologous transcript, suggesting that this sequence may play a major role in hormonal regulation of PAI-1 mRNA stability.
CITATION STYLE
Heaton, J. H., Tillmann-Bogush, M., Leff, N. S., & Gelehrter, T. D. (1998). Cyclic nucleotide regulation of type-1 plasminogen activator-inhibitor mRNA stability in rat hepatoma cells: Identification of cis-acting sequences. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 273(23), 14261–14268. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.23.14261
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