pubmed-article:2797001 | pubmed:abstractText | Pituitary thyrotroph cells specialize in the synthesis of TSH, and thus represent a model to study cell-specific gene expression. We have used the murine TSH beta (mTSH beta) gene promoter and TSH-producing and nonproducing transplantable tumors derived from murine thyrotroph cells, referred to as TtT-97 and MGH 101A, respectively, to identify nuclear factors which selectively interact with the mTSH beta gene. DNase I protection analyses demonstrate that factors present in TtT-97 nuclear extracts bind with high affinity to five separate sites in the TSH beta promoter region, denoted as distal D1 (-253 to -227) and proximal, P1 (-76 to -68), P2 (-106 to -98), P3 (-126 to -112), and P4 (-142 to -131) footprints. By contrast, non-TSH beta expressing thyrotroph cell nuclear extracts and L-cell nonpituitary cell extracts did not appear to footprint the D1 site; whereas the nonpituitary nuclear extracts revealed minimal DNase I protection in the P1-P4 regions. These data show that the distal D1 site is thyrotroph specific and contains a 6 base pair direct repeat sequence (5'-AGATAT-3'). Factor occupancy of the D1 site is protein dependent, occurs rapidly (less than 15 sec), is destabilized by 170 mM KCl, and results in an associated DNase I hypersensitive region. A double-stranded oligonucleotide spanning the D1 footprint competes only the distal factor binding region. Transfection of plasmid constructs containing progressive 5'-deletions of the mTSH beta promoter linked to the reporter gene luciferase into primary TtT-97 cells demonstrate a marked decrease in activity between the regions -270 and -79, which contains the D1 region.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) | lld:pubmed |