Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

    J Immunol. 1999 Mar 1;162(5):2785-90.

    Role of a STAT binding site in the regulation of the human perforin promoter.

    Yu CR, Ortaldo JR, Curiel RE, Young HA, Anderson SK, Gosselin P.

    Division of Basic Sciences, Laboratory of Experimental Immunology, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, MD, USA.

    The pore-forming protein perforin is preferentially expressed in NK and cytotoxic T cells. To investigate the molecular regulation of human perforin gene transcription, the activity of the human perforin promoter was analyzed in human NK and T cell lines using various promoter fragments linked to a luciferase reporter gene. A core promoter was identified within 55 bp upstream of the transcription start site. This promoter region contains a guanine/cytosine box and has basal activity in YT, Kit225-k6, and Jurkat cells. A strong enhancer activity was identified between positions -1136 and -1076, a region that includes a STAT-like element. This enhancer region was active in YT cells, which have constitutive perforin expression and activated STAT3 protein, but not in Kit225-k6 or Jurkat cells, which do not have constitutive perforin expression. Mutation of the STAT binding site resulted in a dramatic down-regulation of promoter activity. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays, using a probe containing the STAT element of the perforin promoter, indicated that this element can bind STAT3 from YT cells. Moreover, the STAT element was shown to bind STAT5a/b induced by IL-2 as well as STAT1alpha induced by IL-6 in human NK cells. Together, these results suggest that STAT proteins play a key role in perforin gene transcription and provide a model by which cytokines can regulate perforin gene expression.

    PMID: 10072525 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    Supplemental Content

    Click here to read