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      A novel calcium signaling pathway targets the c-fos intragenic transcriptional pausing site.

      The Journal of Biological Chemistry
      1-Methyl-3-isobutylxanthine, pharmacology, 5' Untranslated Regions, genetics, 8-Bromo Cyclic Adenosine Monophosphate, Animals, Calcimycin, Calcineurin, metabolism, Calcium, Calmodulin, antagonists & inhibitors, Cyclic AMP, physiology, Cyclic AMP Response Element-Binding Protein, Gene Expression Regulation, drug effects, Genes, Reporter, Genes, fos, Humans, Introns, L Cells (Cell Line), Metallothionein, Mice, Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases, Phosphorylation, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Recombinant Fusion Proteins, biosynthesis, Serine, Signal Transduction, Sulfonamides, Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate, Transcription, Genetic

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          Abstract

          In many cell types, increased intracellular calcium gives rise to a robust induction of c-fos gene expression. Here we show that in mouse Ltk(-) fibroblasts, calcium ionophore acts in synergy with either cAMP or PMA to strongly induce the endogenous c-fos gene. Run-on analysis shows that this corresponds to a substantial increase in active polymerases on downstream gene sequences, i.e. relief of an elongation block by calcium. Correspondingly a chimeric gene, in which the human metallothionein promoter is fused to the fos gene, is strongly induced by ionophore alone, unlike a c-fos promoter/beta-globin coding unit chimeric construct. Internal deletions in the hMT-fos reporter localize the intragenic calcium regulatory element to the 5' portion of intron 1, thereby confirming and extending previous in vitro mapping data. Ionophore induced cAMP response element-binding protein phosphorylation on Ser(133) without affecting the extracellular signal-regulated kinase cascade. Surprisingly, induction involved neither CaM-Ks nor calcineurin, while the calmodulin antagonist W7 activated c-fos transcription on its own. These data suggest that a novel calcium signaling pathway mediates intragenic regulation of c-fos expression via suppression of a transcriptional pause site.

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