The Expression of Porcine Prdx6 Gene Is Up-Regulated by C/EBPβ and CREB

Peroxiredoxin6 (Prdx6) is one of the peroxiredoxin (Prdxs) family members that play an important role in maintaining cell homeostasis. Our previous studies demonstrated that Prdx6 was significantly associated with pig meat quality, especially meat tenderness. However, the transcriptional regulation of porcine Prdx6 remains unclear. In this study, we determined the transcription start site (TSS) of porcine Prdx6 gene by 5′ rapid-amplification of cDNA ends (5′ RACE). Several regulatory elements including CCAAT/enhancer-binding proteinβ (C/EBPβ), Myogenic Differentiation (MyoD), cAMP response element binding protein (CREB), stimulating protein1 (Sp1) and heat shock factor (HSF) binding sites were found by computational analyses together with luciferase reporter system. Overexpression and RNA interference experiments showed that C/EBPβ or CREB could up-regulate the expression of porcine Prdx6 gene at both mRNA and protein level. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSA) and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays (ChIP) confirmed that C/EBPβ and CREB could interact with Prdx6 promoter. Immuoprecipitation results also showed that C/EBPβ could interact with Prdx6 in vivo. Taken together, our findings identified C/EBPβ and CREB as the important regulators of porcine Prdx6 gene expression, and offered clues for further investigation of Prdx6 gene function.


Introduction
Peroxiredoxins are a widely distributed superfamily of peroxidases with high antioxidant activity and have been received much more attention in recent years [1,2]. Six peroxiredoxin family numbers (Prdx1-6) have been identified in mammals and classified as 1-cys, 2-cys based on the number of conserved cystines by which thiol groups are formed as catalytic center to degrade H 2 O 2 and other peroxides [3,4]. Prdx1-5 belongs to 2-cys peroxiredoxins and utilizes thioredoxin as a reductant. Unlike other peroxiredoxins, Prdx6 is the only 1-cysteine peroxiredoxin, and uses glutathione (GSH) rather than thioredoxin as the electron donor [5][6][7][8].
Prdx6 is widely distributed in all major organs with high expression levels in lung, kidney, liver, eye and testes [9][10][11][12]. It is a bifunctional enzyme with both GSH peroxidase and acidic Ca 2+ independent phospholipase A 2 activities that could participate in many physiological processes [7]. With the phospholipase A 2 activity, Prdx6 can regulate phospholipid metabolism. And the GSH peroxidase activity allows Prdx6 to protect cells against oxidative stress by removing reactive oxygen species (ROSs) and limiting ROS levels. ROS are generated in cells during several normal physiologic processes and will be immediately removed by antioxidants like Prdx6. When the equilibrium status between the production and elimination of reactive oxygen species is broken, oxidative stress occur [13]. Excess ROS can result in irreversible oxidative damage to cellular lipids, DNA and proteins, and thereby caused many human diseases [13,14]. Prdx6 has been reported to implicate in development and progression of several human diseases, like Alzheimer [15], Parkinson dementia [16], diabetes [17], cancer [18][19][20][21], cataractogenesis [22]. The formation mechanism of those diseases mostly related to oxidative stress. By analyzing the Prdx6 transcription regulation, many researchers have identified the mainly redox-active regulator of this gene in human, rat or mouse, like Nrf2 [23][24][25], NF-κB [26,27], Sp1 [28], AP1 [18], HSF1 [29].
In animal production, research has shown that the Prdx6 might be a potential protein marker for meat tenderness in bovine biopsies and samples collected shortly after slaughter [30]. Meat tenderness is an important meat eating quality and has achieved much attention in modern animal production. Studies in our laboratory found that Prdx6 gene was differentially expressed in longissimus dorsi between different pig breeds (data unpublished). Besides, two SNPs (417bp C/T; 423bp A/G) were detected in the fourth exon of porcine Prdx6 gene, and were significantly associated with meat quality, especially meat tenderness [31]. The above findings indicated the new function of Prdx6 expression in pig meat quality traits. However, how the expression of Prdx6 gene is regulated is still unclear in pigs until now. In this study, the porcine Prdx6 promoter region and its transcription start site were identified and the possible transcription factors for the Prdx6 gene regulation were also investigated. We found that the transcription factor C/EBPβ and CREB could bind to their binding sites in Prdx6 promoter and regulate the expression of target genes. This study provided the insight into the basal regulation mechanisms of porcine Prdx6 gene, and the possible signaling pathway for the participation of Prdx6 gene in the adipogenesis and myogenesis.

Animals, tissues and cell lines
The animal experimental procedures were approved by the Huazhong Agricultural University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee, Wuhan, China. All pigs used in this study were from the Pig Farm of Huazhong agricultural university. The pigs were slaughtered after low voltage electrical stunning. Ten tissues including kidney, small intestine, stomach, longissimus dorsi, fat, brain, heart, liver, lung and spleen were collected from three Large White pigs at age of 4 month and then immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -80°C. The DNA was extracted using the phenol-chloroform (Invitrogen, USA). Total RNA was extracted using the TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen, USA) and was reverse transcribed to cDNA using the Prime-Script TM RT Reagent Kit (Takara, Japan).
Mouse myoblast cell line C2C12, mouse embryonic fibroblast-adipose like cell line 3T3-L1 and porcine kidney cell line PK15 were purchased from the Institutes for Biological Sciences Cell Resource Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, China. Porcine intramuscular fat (IMF) cells were obtained according to the description in previous report [32].

Tissue expression profile analysis by RT-PCR
Using RT-PCR, ten tissues including heart, liver, spleen, lung, kidney, stomach, brain, longissimus dorsi, fat and small intestine from three 4-month-old Large White pigs were used to analyze the expression profile of Prdx6 gene. RT-PCR was performed using the CFX96 System (Bio-Rad, USA) in a total volume of 20 μl containing SusPr6DL-F/R or β-actin-F/R primers (Table 1) and SYBR-GreenⅡ mix (Takara, Japan). The gene expression results were normalized to the basal level of β-actin. The Ct  ) method was used to analyze the relative gene expression data. 5 0 RACE and Computational analysis 5 0 RACE was performed using a Smarter™ RACE cDNA Amplification Kit (Clontech, USA), according to the manufacturer's user manual. Total RNA of liver tissue from the same 4 month Large White pig was chosen as template for synthesis of Prdx6 cDNA. The gene specific primer (GSP) was synthesized by Sangon (China) as following sequence, GSP: 5 0 -GACCATCACGCT GTCTCCATTCTTCC-3 0 . The PCR products were purified and cloned into pMD-18T vector (Takara) and transformed into DH5α bacteria. Eighteen positive colonies were selected and commercially sequenced by Shanghai Sangon.

Plasmid construction
Ten Prdx6 promoter deletion fragments (D1-D8) were amplified with primers listed in Table 1. PCR products were cloned into pMD-18T vector (Takara). The recombinant plasmids were then digested with NcoI and BglⅡ (Thermo, USA), and then subcloned into luciferase reporter vector pGL3-Basic (Promega, USA) respectively.
The C/EBPβ mutated vector and MyoD mutated vector were constructed by the PCR-based site-directed mutagenesis using the KOD-Plus-Neo(Toyobo, Japan) and DpnⅠ(Thermo, USA), following the manufacturer's protocol. The pGL3-D2 vectors containing the C/EBPβ and MyoD binding sites were chosen as template. The mutation primers M-C/EBPβ-F/R and M-MyoD-F/R were listed in Table 1. The HSF mutated D7 and Sp1 mutated D5 fragments were directly synthetized at Sangon Biotech (China) and then cloned into luciferase reporter vector pGL3-Basic as described before.

Cell culture, transfection and luciferase assay
The C2C12, 3T3-L1 and PK15 cells were cultured in DMEM medium (Gibco, USA) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Gibco, Australia) at 37°C and 5% CO 2 . Cells were seeded into 24-well plate and after 24 h incubation, each well was transfected with 1.0 μg of DNA constructs and 50 ng of Renilla luciferase reporter plasmid (pRL-TK, Promega) using 2 μl lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen, USA). For the co-transfection groups, each well was transfected with 0.8 μg of Prdx6 promoter constructs, 0.5 μg of over-expression vector and 50 ng pRL-TK using 2 μl lipofectamine 2000. At 24-36 h after transfection, cells were lysed and assayed for the luciferase activities using dual-luciferase reporter assay system (Promega). The luciferase activity was measured using PerkinElmer 2030 Multilabel Reader (PerkinElmer) and normalized on the basis of Renilla activity.
Transfection of plasmid DNA or siRNA oligonucleotides PK15 cells were seeded into 6-well plate and cultured at 37°C and 5% CO 2 . After 24 h incubation, cells of each well were transfected with 4μg of over-expression vector or pcDNA3.1 empty vector using 9 μl lipofectamine 2000. C2C12 cells were seeded into 6-well plate and cultured at 37°C and 5% CO 2 . When reaching 70% confluence, cells of each well were transfected with 100 pmol of siRNA using 9 μl lipofectamine 2000. The C/EBPβ and CREB siRNAs (Table 1) were purchased from genepharma (China). After transfection for 36 h, cells were collected; RNA and proteins were extracted for quantitative RT-PCR and Western Blot detection respectively. RNAs were extracted using HP Total RNA Kit (OMEGA, USA) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The reverse transcription and RT-PCR were performed as described before. Primers used in RT-PCR were listed in Table 1.

Electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA)
Nuclear extracts were prepared from C2C12 cells or porcine intramuscular fat (IMF) cells with the Nuclear Extraction Kit (Active Motif, CA, USA). EMSA was performed according to the manufacturer's instruction of Chemiluminescent EMSA Kit (Beyotime). The biotin-labeled double-stranded oligonucleotides (Sangon) containing predicted CREB or C/EBPβ binding sites were incubated with 10 μg nuclear extracts for 20 min at room temperature and were subjected to electrophoresis on 6% polyacrylamide gels. Then transferred to a nylon membrane and results were visualized using the ECL (Bio-Rad). In competition group, a 1-fold molar excess of unlabeled oligonucleotides was added to the reaction mixture prior to the addition of biotin labeled probe. For the supershift group, 2 μg C/EBPβ (Santa Cruz) or CREB (Cell Signaling Technology) antibodies was added to verify the specificity of DNA-protein interaction. The EMSAs were performed according to previous reports [33,34].

Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay
ChIP assay was carried out using the ChIP assay Kit (Beyotime) following the manufacturer's protocol. The PK15 cells cultured in 15 cm-diameter dishes were fixed in formaldehyde for 20 min at room temperature and neutralized with glycine for 5 min. After washing with cold PBS, scraped and harvested cell lysates were sonicated to produce chromatin fragments about 200-750 bp in size. An equal amount of chromatin was immunoprecipitated overnight at 4°C with 4 μg of the following antibodies: anti-CREB, anti-C/EBPβ and Normal Rabbit IgG, and added the ProteinA+G Agarose beads (Beyotime) for further 5 h incubation. Then the beads were washed, and the bound chromatin was eluted in ChIP Elution Buffer. The DNA was treated with proteinase K for 4 h at 45°C. After purified, PCR was carried out using 3 μl DNA sample with primers specific to the Prdx6 promoter ( Immunoprecipitation PK15 cells cultured in 10 cm-diameter dishes were collected and lysed in nondenaturing lysis buffer (Sangon, Shanghai, China) supplemented with protease and phosphatase inhibitor cocktails. Well equal mass of lysate was incubated overnight with 2 μg either anti-Prdx6 or anti-IgG together with 25 μl Protein A+G Agarose beads. After centrifuge the beads were washed with 1ml lysates buffer for three or four times. Then the beads were added with 15 μl 2×SDS loading buffer and boiled for 10 minutes, then were loaded onto an SDS-PAGE gel for western blot analysis.

Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using Student's t test. Data are expressed as mean ± S.D., and statistical significance was considered as p < 0.05. ÃÃ P<0.01; Ã P<0.05; NS, not significant.

Identification of transcription start site of porcine Prdx6 gene
To better understand the transcription regulation of porcine Prdx6 gene, we determined the exact TSS of Prdx6 by 5 0 RACE. Firstly, the tissue expression profile of Prdx6 was analyzed by real time-PCR. The Prdx6 was expressed in almost all the tissues, especially with the highest expression in liver tissue; the kidney, heart, longissimus dorsi (LD), fat and lung tissues also showed higher expression level; while a very low expression level was detected in brain tissue (Fig 1A), which was consistent with the previous report [12]. Then we selected liver tissue as the sample for 5 0 RACE to determine the TSS of Prdx6. And the PCR products of 632bp were obtained ( Fig 1B). After cloning and sequencing, the adenine located at 65bp before the first exon was identified as the major TSS as it appears 15 times in the total 18 clone sequencing results (Fig 1C), while some RACE clones (clone 11, 12 and 17) showed slightly different TSS which were located at the 57bp, 64bp and 80bp before the first exon, respectively. This is a common feature observed in promoter of less TATA-box [35], and Prdx6 gene belongs to the TATA-less promoter. We defined the major TSS as +1 for later illustration.
To determine the crucial promoter motifs, six promoter deletions (D1-D6) were linked to the pGL3-basic vector, and their luciferase activity was analyzed in PK15, C2C12 and 3T3-L1 cell lines (Fig 2B). The promoter activity was with the highest expression in C2C12 cells and the lowest expression in PK15 cells, which may reflect the difference of transfection efficiency in different cell lines and the transcriptional regulation in different species. Compared with the basal level of pGL3-basic, every deletion showed significant promoter activity in each cell line. Generally, D5 deletion had the highest promoter activity; the shortest D6 deletion had the lowest one; while the promoter activities of other deletions were between them. This experiment further indicated that the regulation of Prdx6 gene is complex, and it might be regulated by multiple transcription elements. For example, the fragment from -575bp to -973bp of D3 deletion may contain crucial cis elements which are important for Prdx6 gene expression in C2C12 cells since the luciferase activity of D3 deletion is much higher than that of D4 deletion in C2C12 cells. The D5 and D6 deletions may also contain crucial cis elements which are vital for Prdx6 transcriptional initiation since the shortest two deletions have significant luciferase activity compared with negative control. We then constructed four deletion fragments (D5.1, D5.2, D7 and D8) to further analyze the transcriptional activity of Prdx6 promoter. The results showed that the minimal transcription activity region was located at -16bp~+15bp containing one HSF binding site (Fig 2C).

C/EBPβ and CREB increase Prdx6 gene expression
Co-transfection experiments were performed to identify the transcription factor regulating the Prdx6 gene transcription. As shown in Fig 3A, co-transfection of Prdx6 deletion fragments with over-expression vectors of each transcription factor could remarkably increase the luciferase activities compared with the co-transfection with pcDNA3.1 empty vector. Then we mutated the C/EBPβ, MyoD, Sp1 and HSF binding sites in the Prdx6 deletion plasmids ( Fig  3B), and found sharply decreased luciferase activity of the mutated group compared with the wild-type group (Fig 3C). To determine which factor can indeed affect the Prdx6 transcription at mRNA level, five transcription factors were transfected into PK15 cells. The RT-PCR results revealed that C/EBPβ, CREB and HSF could improve Prdx6 transcription level, while MyoD and Sp1 had no effects (Fig 3D). Prdx6 protein level was also increased after transient transfection with pcDNA3.1-C/EBPβ or pcDNA3.1-CREB (Fig 3E and 3F), but nearly no change after transfected with the pcDNA3.1-HSF1 vector (Fig 3G). Inhibition of C/EBPβ or CREB by siRNA could decrease Prdx6 protein level (Fig 3H and 3I). Those data indicated that C/EBPβ and CREB increase Prdx6 expression both at mRNA and protein level.
CREB could bind to the first CRE site of Prdx6 promoter in vivo and in vitro The EMSAs were performed with nuclear extracts from C2C12 cells to determine whether CREB bind to Prdx6 promoter (Fig 4A). For the first CREB binding site (-601/-588), the DNAprotein complex were obviously present in the biotin-labeled probe (Lane2) and mutationcompetitor (Lane4) groups, whereas no complexes were observed in the absence of nuclear extracts (Lane1). The cold-competitor group (Lane3) displayed decreased intensity of the complex. The specific anti-CREB antibody was added to the mixture of Lane5 and caused the weakness of DNA-protein complex and the appearance of super-shift band. For the second CREB binding site (-308/-293), no specific DNA-protein complex was detected (Fig 4A right). These results indicated that CREB could bind to the first CREB binding site of Prdx6 promoter. ChIP assay was preformed to confirm the binding of CREB to the Prdx6 promoter in vivo. Chromatin fragments from lysates of PK15 cells were precipitated with a CREB antibody or control IgG (Fig 4B). The immunoprecipitates were analyzed by PCR with primers specific to the Prdx6 promoter harboring the CREB binding site. The results also revealed that only the first CRE site of Prdx6 promoter could bind to CREB in vivo. These results suggested that the CREB promotes the expression of Prdx6 gene through binding to the first rather than the second CRE site. This also explained why the luciferase activity of D3 deletion (with two CRE site) was significantly higher than that of D4 deletion (with only the second CRE site) detected in C2C12 cells (P = 0.003) (Fig 2B). No significant difference of Luciferase activity between D3 and D4 detected in 3T3-L1 cells (P = 0.052) may due to the relatively lower expression of CREB in this cell line. In PK15 cells, a completely opposite result was obtained, which may result from the different transcriptional regulation mechanism existed in this cell line.

C/EBPβ could bind to the Prdx6 promoter in vivo and in vitro
By EMSA and ChIP assays, we detected the interaction of C/EBPβ with Prdx6 promoter in vitro and in vivo (Fig 4C and 4D). The specific DNA-protein complex was found in biotinlabeled probe group (Lane2), and was attenuated after addition of cold-competitor probe (Lane3), while the mutated competitor probe failed to abolish complex formation (Lane4). The specific complex did not appear without nuclear extracts in Lane1. Although there is no supershift band appearance in lane5, the complex band was also diminished after addition of C/ EBPβ antibody (Fig 4C). Therefore, we infer that the super-shift band may exist but were not exhibited due to the less sensitivity. ChIP results showed that the specific DNA fragments containing the C/EBPβ binding site of Prdx6 promoter could be amplified in the anti-C/EBPβ group immunoprecipitates rather than the IgG group (Fig 4D). The results indicated that C/ EBPβ could bind to the Prdx6 promoter and increase its expression. In 3T3-L1 and PK15 cells, the luciferase activities of D1 and D2 deletions (containing C/EBPβ binding site) were significantly higher than those of D3 deletion (no C/EBPβ binding site) (Fig 2B), which was consistent with our EMSA and ChIP results. In C2C12 cells, the opposite results were found, because the C/EBPβ was higher expressed in fat cells like 3T3-L1 rather than C2C12 cells.

Prdx6 could interact with C/EBPβ in vivo
Although the transcription regulation mechanism of porcine Prdx6 gene by CREB and C/EBPβ have been illustrated, the interaction of Prdx6 protein with CREB and C/EBPβ proteins were The Porcine Prdx6 Gene Is Up-Regulated by C/EBPβ and CREB still not clear in vivo. To address this, the immunoprecipitation was performed in PK15 cells. Proteins from the PK15 cells were collected and immunoprecipitated by Prdx6 antibody or IgG antibody. The results showed that compared with IgG group, C/EBPβ protein was detected in the immunoprecipitates of anti-Prdx6 group (Fig 5A), whereas CREB could not be detected (Fig 5B), demonstrating that Prdx6 could interact with C/EBPβ and might participate in its biological function.

Discussion
In this study we determined the core promoter motifs and key regulators controlling the transcription of porcine Prdx6 gene. By 5 0 RACE, we analyzed the Prdx6 transcription start site for the first time and found that it is different from the computational prediction. The TSS of Prdx6 is an adenine located at 65bp before the first exon. Bioinformatic analysis and experiments revealed some important cis element binding sites including C/EBPβ, MyoD, CREB, Sp1, and HSF. Our data indicated that only C/EBPβ and CREB could up-regulated the Prdx6 expression.
The CCAAT/enhancer-binding proteinβ (C/EBPβ) is a basic leucine zipper DNA-binding factor and could recognize a consensus DNA sequence (TTNNGNAAT) in target gene [36]. In present study, one C/EBPβ binding sites (TTGCATAAACT) was identified in the porcine Prdx6 promoter, which was located at -1156/-1146 bp. Co-transfection of Prdx6 promoter deletion with a construct over-expressing C/EBPβ significantly increased Prdx6 promoter activity (about 3-fold, P<0.01, Fig 3A). After mutated the C/EBPβ binding site of Prdx6 promoter, the luciferase activity was significantly lower than that of wild type vector (Fig 3C). Over-expression experiment results showed the expression of the Prdx6 gene could be up-regulated by C/EBPβ (Fig 3D and 3E). Many studies proved that C/EBPβ is an important early regulator of adipogenesis that could modulate the key adipogenic transcription factors C/EBPα, PPARγ and SREBP1 [37,38]. By EMSA and ChIP assays, we also found the C/EBPβ could bind to Prdx6 promoter and promote its expression. The important function of Prdx6 is scavenging and limiting reactive oxygen species (ROS) level. Previous reports indicated that oxidative stress and the generation of ROS could regulate the adipogenesis. For example, the hypoxia-inducible factor HIF1 which can inhibit PPARγ was regulated by ROS [39]. ROS have been investigated to facilitate adipogenesis by accelerating mitotic clonal expansion during 3T3-L1 cell differentiation [40]. So it is possible that the C/EBPβ affects adipogenesis through promoting the expression of Prdx6 and thereby leads to the down-regulation of ROS levels. Besides, C/EBPβ could interact with Prdx6 protein (Fig 5A), suggesting the possibility that Prdx6 might participate in the biological function of C/EBPβ in adipogenesis. However, this possibility still needs more research. The Porcine Prdx6 Gene Is Up-Regulated by C/EBPβ and CREB The cAMP response element binding protein (CREB) is a cellular transcription factor that recognizes and binds to the cAMP response element (CRE, TGACGTCA) of target gene promoter [41]. By regulating the expression of its target genes CREB affect several physiological process like cell proliferation, apoptosis, brain circuits [42], and is also involved in responses to oxidative stress [43]. The thioredoxin and redox factor 1 were regulated by CREB under certain stimuli [44]. Here we found that the porcine Prdx6 is also regulated by CREB. Prdx6 promoter region contains two CREB binding sites (-601/-588; -308/-293), and only the first one (-601/-588) could bind with CREB and affect the Prdx6 promoter activity by EMSA, ChIP and overexpression experiments (Fig 3F; Fig 4A and 4B). Previous studies have proved that CREB plays a vital role in muscle differentiation and regeneration. For example, Zuloaga et al proved that the activated CREB by insulin-like growth factor-1(IGF-1) regulates myostatin expression and further inhibits muscle differentiation [45]. Stewart et al found that the CREB is activated by muscle injury and promotes muscle regeneration [46]. CREB-induced up-regulation of C/ EBPβ is required in infiltrating macrophages for induction of M2-specific genes expression and muscle regeneration [47]. The present study demonstrated the Prdx6 could interact with C/ EBPβ, which might provide a new insight of Prdx6 function in muscle differentiation and regeneration through CREB/C/EBPβ cascade. Moreover, ROS is an important signal molecule that plays an essential role in muscle differentiation [48,49]. Since its important role in regulating ROS level, we hypothesized that Prdx6 participate in muscle development by eliminating ROS.
The present study also analyzed several other potential regulators of porcine Prdx6 gene, such as Sp1, MyoD and HSF. Prdx6 promoter contains four conserved GC-boxes but no TATA-box. According to the previous study, the TATA-less promoter is likely to be regulated by GC-box and its response element Sp1 [50]. A conserved E-box (-1068/-1063, CAGCTG), the bHLH (basic helix loop helix) transcription factor MyoD binding site, was also found in the Prdx6 promoter. Although the HSF binding site (+1/+5, AGAAC) of Prdx6 promoter was not conserved among species, it showed remarkable effect in initiating promoter activity (Fig 2C). Co-transfection and site direct mutation assays suggesting the possibility that expression of the Prdx6 gene might be regulated by Sp1, MyoD and HSF1. However, overexpression of Sp1 and MyoD in the PK15 cells did not change the mRNA expression level of Prdx6 (Fig 3D). HSF1 could up-regulate the mRNA level of Prdx6 but have no effect at the protein level of Prdx6 ( Fig  3D and 3G). The possible reason maybe two following points: (1) we just analyzed the activating effect of transcription factors to certain promoter fragment of Prdx6 gene, but ignored the The Porcine Prdx6 Gene Is Up-Regulated by C/EBPβ and CREB complex transcriptional regulation system that may exist in Prdx6 promoter. For Prdx6 promoter, there is a complex of transcription sites for of the different transcription factors in vivo and the transcriptional regulation is dependent on this complex and not from any single individual transcriptional factor. (2) The porcine PK15 cells used in this paper were different from previous study, in which the human LEC cells were used and the Sp1 had been proved to be an activator of Prdx6 [27]. Therefore, we infer that the regulation of Prdx6 gene regulated by Sp1 is different among species.
In conclusion, we have identified the transcription start site and important cis elements of porcine Prdx6 and studied the transcription regulators affecting Prdx6 transcription. The CREB and C/EBPβ were found for the first time to transactivate Prdx6 gene expression by binding to the relevant promoter region. We also found the C/EBPβ could interact with Prdx6. A hypothetical model was proposed that Prdx6 might participate in adipogenesis or myogenesis by interacting with C/EBPβ or scavenging ROS level (Fig 6). The present study will help to better understand the basal transcriptional regulation mechanism and provide clues for further investigation of Prdx6 gene function.