Egr-1-induced endothelial gene expression: a common theme in vascular injury

LM Khachigian, V Lindner, AJ Williams, T Collins - Science, 1996 - science.org
LM Khachigian, V Lindner, AJ Williams, T Collins
Science, 1996science.org
A number of pathophysiologically relevant genes, including platelet-derived growth factor B-
chain (PDGF-B), are induced in the vasculature after acute mechanical injury. In rat aorta,
the activated expression of these genes was preceded by a marked increase in the amount
of the early-growth-response gene product Egr-1 at the endothelial wound edge. Egr-1
interacts with a novel element in the proximal PDGF-B promoter, as well as with consensus
elements in the promoters of other genes induced by endothelial injury. This interaction is …
A number of pathophysiologically relevant genes, including platelet-derived growth factor B-chain (PDGF-B), are induced in the vasculature after acute mechanical injury. In rat aorta, the activated expression of these genes was preceded by a marked increase in the amount of the early-growth-response gene product Egr-1 at the endothelial wound edge. Egr-1 interacts with a novel element in the proximal PDGF-B promoter, as well as with consensus elements in the promoters of other genes induced by endothelial injury. This interaction is crucial for injury-induced PDGF-B promoter-dependent expression. Sp1, whose binding site in the PDGF-B promoter overlaps that of Egr-1, occupies this element in unstimulated cells and is displaced by increasing amounts of Egr-1. These findings implicate Egr-1 in the up-regulated expression of PDGF-B and other potent mediators in mechanically injured arterial endothelial cells.
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