NG2 expression in NG2 glia is regulated by binding of SoxE and bHLH transcription factors to a Cspg4 intronic enhancer.
Hitoshi GotohWilliam M WoodKiran D PatelDaniel C FactorLinda L BoshansTadashi NomuraPaul J TesarKatsuhiko OnoAkiko NishiyamaPublished in: Glia (2018)
NG2 is a type 1 integral membrane glycoprotein encoded by the Cspg4 gene. It is expressed on glial progenitor cells known as NG2 glial cells or oligodendrocyte precursor cells that exist widely throughout the developing and mature central nervous system and vascular mural cells but not on mature oligodendrocytes, astrocytes, microglia, neurons, or neural stem cells. Hence NG2 is widely used as a marker for NG2 glia in the rodent and human. The regulatory elements of the mouse Cspg4 gene and its flanking sequences have been used successfully to target reporter and Cre recombinase to NG2 glia in transgenic mice when used in a large 200 kb bacterial artificial chromosome cassette containing the 38 kb Cspg4 gene in the center. Despite the tightly regulated cell type- and stage-specific expression of NG2 in the brain and spinal cord, the mechanisms that regulate its transcription have remained unknown. Here, we describe a 1.45 kb intronic enhancer of the mouse Cspg4 gene that directed transcription of EGFP reporter to NG2 glia but not to pericytes in vitro and in transgenic mice. The 1.45 kb enhancer contained binding sites for SoxE and basic helix-loop-helix transcription factors, and its enhancer activity was augmented cooperatively by these factors, whose respective binding elements were found in close proximity to each other. Mutations in these binding elements abrogated the enhancer activity when tested in the postnatal mouse brain.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- dna binding
- genome wide identification
- binding protein
- induced apoptosis
- spinal cord
- copy number
- cell cycle arrest
- poor prognosis
- neuropathic pain
- genome wide
- endothelial cells
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- gene expression
- preterm infants
- crispr cas
- spinal cord injury
- neural stem cells
- blood brain barrier
- multiple sclerosis
- brain injury
- cerebrospinal fluid
- cerebral ischemia
- subarachnoid hemorrhage