An autoregulatory loop directs the tissue-specific expression of p63 through a long-range evolutionarily conserved enhancer

D Antonini, B Rossi, R Han, A Minichiello… - … and cellular biology, 2006 - Am Soc Microbiol
D Antonini, B Rossi, R Han, A Minichiello, T Di Palma, M Corrado, S Banfi, M Zannini
Molecular and cellular biology, 2006Am Soc Microbiol
Abstract p63, a p53 family member, is essential for the development of various stratified
epithelia and is one of the earliest markers of many ectodermal structures, including the
epidermis, oral mucosa, apical ectodermal ridge, and mammary gland. Genetic regulatory
mechanisms controlling p63 spatial expression during development have not yet been
defined. Using a genomic approach, we identified an evolutionarily conserved cis-regulatory
element, located 160 kb downstream of the first p63 exon, which functions as a keratinocyte …
Abstract
p63, a p53 family member, is essential for the development of various stratified epithelia and is one of the earliest markers of many ectodermal structures, including the epidermis, oral mucosa, apical ectodermal ridge, and mammary gland. Genetic regulatory mechanisms controlling p63 spatial expression during development have not yet been defined. Using a genomic approach, we identified an evolutionarily conserved cis-regulatory element, located 160 kb downstream of the first p63 exon, which functions as a keratinocyte-specific enhancer and is sufficient to recapitulate expression of the endogenous gene during mouse embryogenesis. Dissection of the p63 enhancer activity revealed a positive autoregulatory loop in which the p63 proteins directly bind to and are essential regulators of the enhancer. Accordingly, transactivating p63 isoforms induce endogenous p63 expression in cells that do not normally express this gene, whereas dominant negative isoforms suppress p63 expression in keratinocytes. In addition the transcription factor AP-2 also binds to the enhancer and cooperates with p63 to induce its activity. These results demonstrate that a long-range autoregulatory loop is involved in the regulation of p63 expression during embryonic development and in adult cells.
American Society for Microbiology