Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor subtype-and cell-type-specific activation of genomic target genes upon adenoviral transgene delivery

R Nielsen, L Grøntved, HG Stunnenberg… - Molecular and Cellular …, 2006 - Taylor & Francis
R Nielsen, L Grøntved, HG Stunnenberg, S Mandrup
Molecular and Cellular Biology, 2006Taylor & Francis
Investigations of the molecular events involved in activation of genomic target genes by
peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) have been hampered by the inability to
establish a clean on/off state of the receptor in living cells. Here we show that the
combination of adenoviral delivery and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) is ideal for
dissecting these mechanisms. Adenoviral delivery of PPARs leads to a rapid and
synchronous expression of the PPAR subtypes, establishment of transcriptional active …
Investigations of the molecular events involved in activation of genomic target genes by peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) have been hampered by the inability to establish a clean on/off state of the receptor in living cells. Here we show that the combination of adenoviral delivery and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) is ideal for dissecting these mechanisms. Adenoviral delivery of PPARs leads to a rapid and synchronous expression of the PPAR subtypes, establishment of transcriptional active complexes at genomic loci, and immediate activation of even silent target genes. We demonstrate that PPARγ2 possesses considerable ligand-dependent as well as independent transactivation potential and that agonists increase the occupancy of PPARγ2/retinoid X receptor at PPAR response elements. Intriguingly, by direct comparison of the PPARs (α, γ, and β/δ), we show that the subtypes have very different abilities to gain access to target sites and that in general the genomic occupancy correlates with the ability to activate the corresponding target gene. In addition, the specificity and potency of activation by PPAR subtypes are highly dependent on the cell type. Thus, PPAR subtype-specific activation of genomic target genes involves an intricate interplay between the properties of the subtype- and cell-type-specific settings at the individual target loci.
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