Enhancer-mediated control of macrophage-specific arginase I expression

AL Pauleau, R Rutschman, R Lang… - The Journal of …, 2004 - journals.aai.org
AL Pauleau, R Rutschman, R Lang, A Pernis, SS Watowich, PJ Murray
The Journal of Immunology, 2004journals.aai.org
Arginase I expression in the liver must remain constant throughout life to eliminate excess
nitrogen via the urea cycle. In contrast, arginase I expression in macrophages is silent until
signals from Th2 cytokines such as IL-4 and IL-13 are received and the mRNA is then
induced four to five orders of magnitude. Arginase I is hypothesized to play a regulatory and
potentially pathogenic role in diseases such as asthma, parasitic, bacterial, and worm
infections by modulating NO levels and promoting fibrosis. We show that Th2-inducible …
Abstract
Arginase I expression in the liver must remain constant throughout life to eliminate excess nitrogen via the urea cycle. In contrast, arginase I expression in macrophages is silent until signals from Th2 cytokines such as IL-4 and IL-13 are received and the mRNA is then induced four to five orders of magnitude. Arginase I is hypothesized to play a regulatory and potentially pathogenic role in diseases such as asthma, parasitic, bacterial, and worm infections by modulating NO levels and promoting fibrosis. We show that Th2-inducible arginase I expression in mouse macrophages is controlled by an enhancer that lies− 3 kb from the basal promoter. PU. 1, IL-4-induced STAT6, and C/EBPβ assemble at the enhancer and await the effect of another STAT6-regulated protein (s) that must be synthesized de novo. Identification of a powerful extrahepatic regulatory enhancer for arginase I provides potential to manipulate arginase I activity in immune cells while sparing liver urea cycle function.
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