A p300 protein as a coactivator of GATA-6 in the transcription of the smooth muscle-myosin heavy chain gene

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Abstract

The mechanisms that regulate smooth muscle development and differentiation are poorly understood. Although recent studies have suggested the possible role of a zinc finger transcription factor, GATA-6, in the differentiation of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), the downstream gene targeted by GATA-6 is unknown. The expression of smooth muscle-myosin heavy chain (Sm-MHC) provides a highly specific marker for the differentiated phenotype of VSMCs as well as the smooth muscle cell lineage. Here, we show that GATA-6 bound to a GATA-like motif (-810/-805) within the rat Sm-MHC promoter in a sequence-specific manner and activated this promoter through this site. In addition, we show that the transcriptional co-activator p300 associated with GATA-6 during the transcription of the Sm-MHC gene. A p300/GATA-6 complex in VSMCs was up-regulated by induction of the quiescent phenotype. A wild-type E1A, which interferes With endogenous p300, but not a mutant E1A defective for p300 binding, markedly down-regulated the expression of endogenous Sm-MHC in quiescent-phenotype VSMCs. These studies provide the first identification of a functionally important GATA-6 binding site within a smooth muscle-specific promoter and suggest a role for p300 in the maintenance of the differentiated phenotype in VSMCs as a coactivator of GATA-6.

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Wada, H., Hasegawa, K., Morimoto, T., Kakita, T., Yanazume, T., & Sasayama, S. (2000). A p300 protein as a coactivator of GATA-6 in the transcription of the smooth muscle-myosin heavy chain gene. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 275(33), 25330–25335. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M000828200

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