Identification of a novel regulatory region in the interleukin-6 gene promoter

JM Samuel, D Kelberman, AJP Smith, SE Humphries… - Cytokine, 2008 - Elsevier
JM Samuel, D Kelberman, AJP Smith, SE Humphries, P Woo
Cytokine, 2008Elsevier
Interleukin-6 (IL6) is an important pleiotropic cytokine that is regulated at the transcriptional
level. To date, most work on its regulation has focused on a 1.2 kb region 5′ from the start
of transcription, similar to published reports on other cytokine genes. This report
demonstrates for the first time that a cytokine gene can be regulated by cis-acting regions
much further upstream than previously examined. Comparative genomic analysis showed
that a 120kb region contains blocks of sequence conservation between human and rodent …
Interleukin-6 (IL6) is an important pleiotropic cytokine that is regulated at the transcriptional level. To date, most work on its regulation has focused on a 1.2kb region 5′ from the start of transcription, similar to published reports on other cytokine genes. This report demonstrates for the first time that a cytokine gene can be regulated by cis-acting regions much further upstream than previously examined. Comparative genomic analysis showed that a 120kb region contains blocks of sequence conservation between human and rodent genomes, and that a 15kb region proximal to the start of transcription contains 10 highly homologous sequence blocks of between 100 and 250bp. By means of a reporter gene assay, a novel transcriptionally active region located between −5307 and −5202bp upstream from the start of transcription was identified. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays showed nuclear protein(s) binding to this region, thus raising the possibility that the regulatory activity shown by the reporter gene constructs may be mediated by these proteins. These results suggest that the regulation of IL6 expression involves a much larger upstream region than previously examined and the control of IL6 transcription is likely to be regulated by a complex mechanism of modular cis-regulatory elements.
Elsevier