The chromatin landscape of the casein gene locus. 2012

Monique Rijnkels, and Elena Kabotyanski, and Amy Shore, and Jeffrey M Rosen
Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA.

For several decades, the regulation of casein gene expression by the lactogenic hormones, prolactin and glucocorticoids, has provided an excellent model system in which to study how steroid and peptide hormones regulate gene expression. Early studies of casein gene regulation defined conserved sequence elements in the 5' flanking region of these genes, including one of which was identified as a γ-interferon activation sequence (GAS). Although this site was thought to interact with a mammary gland-specific factor, purification and cloning of this factor by Bernd Groner and his colleagues revealed it was instead a new member of the signal transducers and activators of transcription family, Stat5, which was expressed in many tissues. The exquisite tissue-specific expression of the casein genes was subsequently shown to depend not on a single transcription factor but on composite response elements that interacted with a number of ubiquitous transcription factors in response to the combinatorial effects of peptide and steroid hormone signaling. More recent studies have defined cooperative effects of prolactin and glucocorticoids as well as antagonistic effects of progesterone on the chromatin structure of both the casein gene proximal promoter region as well as a distal enhancer. Local chromatin modifications as well as long-range interactions facilitated by DNA looping are required for the hormonal regulation of β-casein gene expression. The casein genes are part of a large gene cluster, and the chromatin landscape of the entire cluster is regulated in a tissue-specific and developmental manner. Finally, newly discovered large non coding RNAs, such as the pregnancy-induced non coding RNA (PINC) may play an important role in the epigenetic regulation of mammary gland differentiation.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries

Related Publications

Monique Rijnkels, and Elena Kabotyanski, and Amy Shore, and Jeffrey M Rosen
February 1997, Mammalian genome : official journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society,
Monique Rijnkels, and Elena Kabotyanski, and Amy Shore, and Jeffrey M Rosen
January 1997, Mammalian genome : official journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society,
Monique Rijnkels, and Elena Kabotyanski, and Amy Shore, and Jeffrey M Rosen
April 1997, Mammalian genome : official journal of the International Mammalian Genome Society,
Monique Rijnkels, and Elena Kabotyanski, and Amy Shore, and Jeffrey M Rosen
April 2006, Current opinion in genetics & development,
Monique Rijnkels, and Elena Kabotyanski, and Amy Shore, and Jeffrey M Rosen
May 2023, Gynecologic oncology,
Monique Rijnkels, and Elena Kabotyanski, and Amy Shore, and Jeffrey M Rosen
February 2018, Nature genetics,
Monique Rijnkels, and Elena Kabotyanski, and Amy Shore, and Jeffrey M Rosen
May 2004, Sheng wu gong cheng xue bao = Chinese journal of biotechnology,
Monique Rijnkels, and Elena Kabotyanski, and Amy Shore, and Jeffrey M Rosen
August 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America,
Monique Rijnkels, and Elena Kabotyanski, and Amy Shore, and Jeffrey M Rosen
June 2020, Development, growth & differentiation,
Monique Rijnkels, and Elena Kabotyanski, and Amy Shore, and Jeffrey M Rosen
September 2008, Nucleic acids research,
Copied contents to your clipboard!