1. Academic Validation
  2. Constitutive and cytokine-induced expression of the ETS transcription factor ESE-3 in the lung

Constitutive and cytokine-induced expression of the ETS transcription factor ESE-3 in the lung

  • Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol. 2002 Dec;27(6):697-704. doi: 10.1165/rcmb.2002-0011OC.
Eric S Silverman 1 Rebecca M Baron Lyle J Palmer Louis Le Arlene Hallock Venkat Subramaniam Richard J Riese Matthew D McKenna Xuesong Gu Towia A Libermann Antonio Tugores Kathleen J Haley Stephanie Shore Jeffrey M Drazen Scott T Weiss
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine and Channing Laboratory, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston 02115, USA. esilverm@hsph.harvard.edu
Abstract

Family studies of asthma suggest that the genes ESE-2 and ESE-3 contain polymorphisms that contribute to disease susceptibility. Each gene codes for an ETS transcription factor that is characterized by epithelium-restricted constitutive expression and may function as a context-dependent activator or repressor of transcription; however, nothing is known about the role of these genes in lung homeostasis or the pathogenesis of airway disease. In this study, we show that ESE-3 mRNA and protein are constitutively expressed in bronchial and mucous gland epithelial cells. Consistent with these findings, ESE-3 mRNA is constitutively expressed in human bronchial epithelial cells grown in tissue culture. In contrast, ESE-2 mRNA could not be detected in the lung or cultured human bronchial epithelial cells. Human bronchial smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts do not constitutively express ESE-3; however, after stimulation with interleukin-1beta or tumor necrosis factor-alpha, levels of ESE-3 mRNA and protein increase dramatically by 24 h. This cytokine induction is dose-dependent and abrogated by specific inhibitors of the MEK1/2 (U0126) and p38 (SB03580) signal transduction pathways. Overexpression of ESE-3 protein in 3T3 cells and human bronchial smooth muscle cells inhibits MMP-1 promoter activity, suggesting that ESE-3 may function as a transcriptional repressor.

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