Abstract
Aims/hypothesis
The stimulation of glucagon secretion in response to decreased glucose levels has been studied extensively. In contrast, little is known about the regulation of glucagon gene expression in response to fluctuations in glucose concentration. Paired box 6 (PAX6) is a key transcription factor that regulates the glucagon promoter by binding to the G1 and G3 elements. Here, we investigated the role of the transcription factor aristaless-like homeobox 3 (ALX3) as a glucose-dependent modulator of PAX6 activity in alpha cells.
Methods
Experiments were performed in wild-type or Alx3-deficient islets and alphaTC1 cells. We used chromatin immunoprecipitations and electrophoretic mobility shift assays for DNA binding, immunoprecipitations and pull-down assays for protein interactions, transfected cells for promoter activity, and small interfering RNA and quantitative RT-PCR for gene expression.
Results
Elevated glucose concentration resulted in stimulated expression of Alx3 and decreased glucagon gene expression in wild-type islets. In ALX3-deficient islets, basal glucagon levels were non-responsive to changes in glucose concentration. In basal conditions ALX3 bound to the glucagon promoter at G3, but not at G1. ALX3 could form heterodimers with PAX6 that were permissive for binding to G3 but not to G1. Thus, increasing the levels of ALX3 in response to glucose resulted in the sequestration of PAX6 by ALX3 for binding to G1, thus reducing glucagon promoter activation and glucagon gene expression.
Conclusions/interpretation
Glucose-stimulated expression of ALX3 in alpha cells provides a regulatory mechanism for the downregulation of glucagon gene expression by interfering with PAX6-mediated transactivation on the glucagon G1 promoter element.
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Introduction
Beta cell dysfunction, accompanied by a reduced capacity of target tissues to respond to insulin, has largely been accepted as the main cause of chronic hyperglycaemia characteristic of diabetes [1, 2]. In recent years, however, dysfunctional glucagon hypersecretion contributing to high blood glucose has been recognised as an additional and important aetiopathogenic factor [3, 4]. As hormonal stores depleted after secretion must be replenished by increasing glucagon gene expression and biosynthesis in a coordinated manner [5], the elucidation of the mechanisms that link glucagon gene transcription and glucagon secretion in response to fluctuations in glucose concentrations is of great importance for the understanding of the aetiopathogenic mechanisms of diabetes.
The secretion of glucagon from alpha cells stimulated in response to decreased blood glucose levels has been studied extensively [6–8]. In contrast, the study of glucose-regulated glucagon gene transcription has received less attention and the mechanisms involved remain unclear [9–12]. Glucagon gene transcription in alpha cells is regulated primarily by at least four promoter elements, termed G1–G4 [13–15], that are recognised by several transcription factors including paired box 6 (PAX6) [16–20]. PAX6 is particularly important because it is essential for the differentiation of alpha cells during development [21], and because it regulates the expression of the glucagon gene both directly [16, 22–24] and indirectly, acting on genes encoding transcription factors that, in turn, act on the glucagon promoter [25]. In addition, PAX6 regulates the expression of genes involved in prohormone processing [26] and glucagon secretion [27]. Therefore, PAX6 co-ordinately links glucagon production and secretion in alpha cells. However, it is unknown whether PAX6 or other G-element-binding transcription factors are involved in glucose-dependent regulation of glucagon gene expression.
In this study, we show that the homeodomain transcription factor aristaless-like homeobox 3 (ALX3), expressed in islets cells and previously found to be important for glucose homeostasis [28, 29], dynamically regulates glucose-dependent glucagon gene expression by engaging in protein–protein interactions with PAX6 that result in reduced PAX6 accessibility to the glucagon promoter in the presence of increased glucose concentrations.
Methods
Mice
Alx3-deficient mice [30] derived from a colony originally provided by F. Meijlink (Netherlands Institute for Developmental Biology, Utrecht, the Netherlands), which has been maintained in our animal facilities for several years. Details about generation, maintenance and genotyping have been described previously [31]. Experiments were performed with 12–16-week-old male mice. Animals were randomly assigned to experiments as long as they satisfied inclusion criteria (age, sex and genotype). Experimental protocols were approved by the institutional bioethics committee and meet the requirements of current Spanish and European Union legislation.
Islets
Mouse pancreatic islets were isolated as described previously [32]. Details are provided in the electronic supplementary material (ESM) Methods.
Glucagon content
Batches of 30 islets were incubated overnight at 4°C in 50 ml lysis solution (70% ethanol, 0.4% HCl at 30%, [all % vol./vol.]). After centrifugation, the supernatant fraction was used for glucagon detection using an ELISA kit (YK090; Gentaur, Brussels, Belgium).
Quantitative RT-PCR
Determinations were performed from total RNA samples as detailed in the ESM Methods and ESM Fig. 1. The sequences of the oligonucleotides used are shown in ESM Table 1.
Cell lines
AlphaTC1 cells (alphaTC1-9, ATCC CRL-2350) (provided by I. Quesada, Miguel Hernandez University, Elche, Spain) were cultured as described previously [10], supplemented with 16 mmol/l glucose unless otherwise specified. BHK21 cells were cultured as described previously [28]. Cells were authenticated in our laboratory and checked to be free of mycoplasma contamination in our institutional cell culture facilities.
Electrophoretic mobility shift assays
Electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs) were performed as described previously [33]. The sequences of the oligonucleotides used are shown in ESM Table 2. When indicated, ALX3 [33] or PAX6 (Millipore, MAB5552) antibodies were added to the binding reaction. In Fig. 3e, the ab64985 ALX3 antibody (Abcam, Cambridge, UK) was used.
Plasmids
Alx3 and Pax6 expression plasmids have been described previously [22, 28]. The oligonucleotides used for plasmid constructions are indicated in ESM Table 3. Luciferase reporter plasmids, plasmids encoding glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusion proteins and those used for in vitro transcription/translation are described in the ESM Methods.
Transfections
Cells (105 per well) were incubated with reporter plasmids (0.5 μg) mixed with Transfectin (BioRad, Alcobendas, Madrid, Spain) in serum-free medium. Expression plasmids or the corresponding empty vectors were used when required, keeping the total amount of DNA constant. Luciferase activity was determined and corrected for transfection efficiency using the Renilla luciferase assay kit (Promega). The Rous sarcoma virus enhancer reporter plasmid RSV-Luc was used as a standard for normalisation. All transfections were performed in duplicates.
GST pull-down assays
[35S]Met-labelled and GST fusion proteins were used as described previously [33]. Details are provided in the ESM Methods.
Immunoprecipitation
Immunoprecipitations [28] were performed using extracts prepared from alphaTC1 cells, and were followed by immunodetection of PAX6 or ALX3 by western blot, as indicated in the ESM Methods.
Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays [28] were performed using chromatin extracted from mouse islets or alphaTC1 cells. Details are indicated in the ESM Methods and ESM Table 4.
RNA interference
RNA interference (RNAi) [32] was performed using double-stranded RNA duplexes, as described in the ESM Methods.
Western blots
Nuclear extracts from alphaTC1 cells and primary antibodies for ALX3 [34] (1:4,000 dilution), PAX6 (H-295, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Heidelberg, Germany) (1:1,000 dilution) and actin (clone AC-15, Sigma, Madrid, Spain) (1:10,000 dilution) were used [32].
Statistical analysis
The experimenter was blind to group assignment and outcome assessment in all experiments involving quantitative PCR determinations (RT-PCR, ChIP assays and RNAi). Results represent mean ± SEM for the indicated number of experiments. Statistical significance was calculated using Student’s t test.
Results
Decreased glucagon levels in ALX3-deficient islets
Reduced levels of glucagon content and gene expression in islets of ALX3-deficient mice (Fig. 1) [29] could not be attributed to decreased expression of key transcriptional regulators because Pax6 [16], Foxa2 [20] and Arx [35] did not change, whereas Mafb [17] increased (Fig. 1b). Thus, we hypothesised that ALX3 could regulate the glucagon promoter directly, and therefore fluctuations in the levels of ALX3 could contribute to the dynamic regulation of glucagon gene expression depending on the metabolic needs of the organism. To test this hypothesis we investigated whether the levels of ALX3 in alpha cells vary depending on fluctuations in glucose concentration.
Expression of Alx3 is stimulated by glucose and results in inhibition of glucagon gene expression
The levels of Alx3 mRNA and ALX3 protein were elevated when alphaTC1 cells were cultured in the presence of high rather than low glucose, indicating that Alx3 is a glucose-responsive gene (Fig. 2a–c). We tested whether glucose-regulated Alx3 affects glucagon gene expression using cultured mouse islets. In wild-type islets, increasing the concentration of glucose in the medium resulted in a significant increase in Alx3 expression (Fig. 2d) and a concomitant decrease in glucagon expression (Fig. 2e). In contrast, in Alx3-deficient islets, increasing the concentration of glucose did not result in a significant change in the expression of glucagon mRNA (Fig. 2e). A glucose-stimulated increase in insulin I expression was unaffected by lack of ALX3 (Fig. 2f).
ALX3 binds specific sites of the glucagon promoter
EMSA with nuclear extracts from alphaTC1 cells and probes corresponding to the G3 or G1 sites showed that at least two of the bands detected on the G3 probe were disrupted by the addition of ALX3- or PAX6-specific antibodies (Fig. 3b). At the G1 site, the addition of the PAX6 antibody disrupted the formation of DNA–protein complexes, whereas the addition of the ALX3 antibody had no effect (Fig. 3c). The ALX3 antibody inhibited the formation of a complex on the G150 site (Fig. 3d), a homeodomain-binding site located downstream from G1 (Fig. 3a) [36]. Mutations in the PAX6 paired domain-binding site of G3 indicated that lack of binding of PAX6 prevented recruitment of ALX3 (ESM Fig. 2). ChIP assays demonstrated that both ALX3 and PAX6 are physically bound to the same region of the native glucagon promoter in vivo (Fig. 3e). These experiments indicate that ALX3 and PAX6 are part of the protein complex assembled on G3, and that the G1 site is bound by PAX6 as previously determined [36], but not by ALX3, which in turn recognises the downstream G150 site.
ALX3–PAX6 heterodimers bind G3 but not G1
To investigate whether ALX3 interacts directly with PAX6 we performed immunoprecipitations using alphaTC1 cells. PAX6 was detected in samples immunoprecipitated with an ALX3 antiserum (Fig. 4a), and vice versa (Fig. 4b), but not in those immunoprecipitated with control serum, indicating that ALX3 and PAX6 physically interact in the nuclei of alpha cells. The domains from each protein required for this interaction were studied using GST pull-down assays using full-length or truncated proteins (Fig. 4c). We found that [35S]Met-labelled full-length PAX6 was able to interact specifically with GST–ALX3 and with GST–ALX3 homeodomain (ALX3HD), but not with control GST or with GST fusion proteins containing either the carboxyl or the amino terminus of ALX3 (GST–ALX3ΔN and GST–ALX3ΔC, respectively) (Fig. 4d). A similar pattern of interactions was found when the [35S]Met-labelled paired domain of PAX6 (PAX6PD) was used (Fig. 4e). Finally, the [35S]Met-labelled homeodomain of ALX3 (ALX3HD) could interact independently with either the paired domain or the homeodomain of PAX6 (GST–PAX6PD or GST–PAX6HD, respectively) (Fig. 4f). These results indicate that the homeodomain of ALX3 is sufficient for heterodimerisation via direct interactions with the paired domain or the homeodomain of PAX6.
The DNA binding consequences of these interactions were investigated using EMSA. PAX6 synthesised in vitro using a reticulocyte lysate could bind to the G3 probe as expected (Fig. 4g). In contrast, GST–ALX3HD, which bound efficiently to a previously described control probe (ESM Fig. 3a), failed to bind to G3 on its own. However, when the homeodomain of ALX3 was incubated together with PAX6 an additional band was generated, indicating that PAX6–ALX3 heterodimers can recognise G3 (Fig. 4g). In the case of the G1 site, binding of in vitro synthesised PAX6 (Fig. 4h) or PAX6 present in nuclear extracts of alphaTC1 cells (Fig. 4i) was confirmed by the addition of a specific antibody that disrupted binding. In both cases, the complexes containing PAX6 disappeared on the addition to the binding reaction of GST–ALX3, but remained undisturbed by the addition of control GST (Fig. 4h, i). Lack of binding of ALX3 to the G1 site was confirmed using recombinant ALX3 (ESM Fig. 3c, d).
These experiments indicate that ALX3–PAX6 heterodimers can bind to G3 efficiently, but are not capable of recognising G1. As G1 is a well-known target site for binding by PAX6, these results raise the possibility that increasing levels of ALX3 in alpha cells could result in inhibition of PAX6 binding to G1, thus resulting in decreased glucagon promoter activation. This notion was tested directly by transfections in alphaTC1 cells.
Functional interactions between ALX3 and PAX6 on the glucagon promoter
Overexpression of ALX3 resulted in decreased luciferase activity elicited by the glucagon promoter reporter plasmid Gcg370Luc (Fig. 5a). In marked contrast, overexpression of PAX6 resulted in increased luciferase activity (Fig. 5a). When overexpressed together, the transactivation activity of PAX6 was inhibited by ALX3 in a concentration-dependent manner (Fig. 5b). In turn, increasing amounts of PAX6 were unable to transactivate the glucagon promoter in the presence of a fixed amount of ALX3 (Fig. 5b).
When using the Gcg370/205Luc reporter, including G3 but excluding G1, ALX3 stimulated luciferase activity to a similar degree to that elicited by PAX6, and overexpression of both transcription factors concomitantly did not further increase or inhibit reporter activity (Fig. 5c). In contrast, when using Gcg122Luc, including G1 but excluding G3, overexpression of PAX6 stimulated luciferase activity, but overexpression of ALX3 decreased basal reporter activity and prevented transactivation by PAX6 (Fig. 5d). A similar pattern was found when using the reporter plasmids 3×G3T81Luc, which carries three tandem copies of G3, or 3×G1T81Luc, which carries three tandem copies of G1, respectively (Fig. 5e, f). In BHK21 cells, which do not express ALX3 or PAX6 [33, 37], ALX3 did not increase Gcg370Luc activity on its own, but enhanced PAX6-dependent transactivation synergistically (ESM Fig. 4). However, this effect was reversed to an inhibition of luciferase activity with the highest amount of ALX3 used (ESM Fig. 4). These experiments support the notion that ALX3 contributes to glucagon promoter activity by acting on G3 co-ordinately with PAX6, and that, in turn, it is able to inhibit PAX6-dependent promoter activity on G1 when ALX3 levels increase.
Alx3 regulates glucose-dependent binding of PAX6 and glucagon expression in alpha cells
Our data are consistent with a model according to which glucose-dependent decrease in glucagon gene expression could result from selective displacement of PAX6 from G1 as a consequence of the formation of new PAX6–ALX3 heterodimers generated in response to increased levels of ALX3 induced by glucose (Fig. 6). In alphaTC1 cells, glucose-dependent increase in ALX3 levels without affecting the levels of PAX6 (Fig. 6c) was accompanied by increased ALX3–PAX6 heterodimerisation demonstrated by immunoprecipitation (Fig. 6d). As predicted by our model, increased levels of ALX3 specifically induced by high glucose concentrations (Fig. 6e) were accompanied by decreased binding of PAX6 to G1 (Fig. 6f), whereas binding of PAX6 to G3 or of ALX3 to G150, were unaffected (Fig. 6g–h). Reduced binding to G1 was not observed when expression of Alx3 was silenced by small interfering (si)RNA (Fig. 6i–j).
We tested this model further in alphaTC1 cells with silenced expression of Alx3 (Fig. 7a–c). In the presence of 2.8 mmol/l glucose, glucagon expression was reduced in Alx3-knockdown cells relative to control cells (Fig. 7d), likely reflecting loss of ALX3 binding to G3 and G150 (Fig. 7e). In contrast, in the presence of 16 mmol/l glucose, glucagon expression increased in Alx3-knockdown cells relative to control cells (Fig. 7f), reflecting availability of unsequestered PAX6, a stronger transactivator, for binding to G1 (Fig. 7g). These experiments support the requirement of ALX3 for glucose-dependent downregulation of glucagon gene expression in alpha cells.
Discussion
Our work indicates that ALX3 participates in the regulation of glucagon expression by binding with PAX6 to G3, and independently to G150. PAX6 binds to G1 in the absence of ALX3, but PAX6–ALX3 heterodimers are unable to recognise G1. This has important functional implications because the levels of ALX3 are upregulated by glucose, thus favouring the formation of ALX3–PAX6 heterodimers engaging G1-bound PAX6. In this manner, ALX3 sequesters PAX6 and prevents its binding to G1, leading to downregulation of transcriptional activity. The inhibitory effect of ALX3 on G1-bound PAX6 is dominant because PAX6 is a stronger transactivator than ALX3. In agreement with this model, glucose-unregulated glucagon mRNA levels in ALX3-deficient islets are higher than those observed in control islets under high glucose conditions (see Fig. 2e and ESM Fig. 5). In ALX3-deficient islets, PAX6 would be bound to both G1 and G3 regardless of the concentration of glucose, whereas in wild-type islets, PAX6 would only be bound to G3, and the contribution of ALX3 bound to G3 and G150 would be small because ALX3 is known to be a weak transactivator [28, 29] (see Fig. 5c, e).
Transcription factor interactions resulting in inhibition of glucagon expression by interfering with PAX6 have been described previously. Some of these interactions may have implications in the context of the pharmacological treatment of diabetes [24], or during embryonic development to prevent glucagon expression in non-alpha islet cells [23, 36, 38], but their physiological relevance has not been completely established [39].
Glucagon secretion in the presence of reduced glucose concentration is coupled with stimulated transcription of the glucagon gene triggered by an auto-regulatory loop ensuring continuous hormone availability [5]. Our data support the existence of an ALX3-dependent counter-regulatory glucose-sensing mechanism, acting at the transcriptional level, through which overproduction of glucagon would be prevented under conditions in which glucose concentration is elevated. Thus, downregulation of PAX6 function by glucose-induced modulation of the ALX3 to PAX6 ratio links transcriptional regulation of gene expression in alpha cells to fluctuations in the circulating concentrations of glucose to accommodate glucagon biosynthesis to the metabolic demands of the organism.
PAX6 links glucagon production and secretion by co-ordinating the expression of a gene network regulating these processes at different levels [16, 22–27]. Therefore, it is possible that these genes are regulated in a glucose-dependent manner via a mechanism involving selective interactions between PAX6 and ALX3 on different promoters. For example, the levels of Mafb were elevated in islets from ALX3-deficient mice, suggesting that ALX3 inhibits Mafb expression. Although v-maf musculoaponeurotic fibrosarcoma oncogene family, protein B (MAFB) can act as a repressor [40], it is known to regulate glucagon gene expression [16, 17], and the Mafb promoter contains two potential PAX6-binding sites [25]. Thus, inhibition of Mafb expression by glucose-induced ALX3-mediated downregulation of PAX6 transactivation may provide an additional mechanism to reduce glucagon promoter activity in the presence of high glucose levels.
Apart from genes encoding transcription factors regulating glucagon gene expression [25], PAX6 regulates the expression of additional genes in alpha cells including those encoding the prohormone convertase 2 and its chaperone 7B2, the free fatty acid receptor 1 (GPR40) and the glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide receptor (GIPR) [26, 27]. As these genes regulate glucagon production and secretion, the possible occurrence of glucose-dependent PAX6–ALX3 interactions on their promoters may be centrally important for the coordinated modulation of transcriptional mechanisms opposing glucagon overproduction under elevated glucose concentrations. This would place ALX3 as a key component of glucose-regulated glucagon production and secretion.
Both ALX3 and PAX6 contain paired-type homeodomains that can form dimers with selective DNA-binding specificities [33, 41, 42]. Besides, PAX6, but not ALX3, contains a paired domain. Both the paired domain and the homeodomain of PAX proteins bind DNA, and in some cases they interact to promote cooperative binding to specific regulatory elements [43–45]. PAX6 heterodimerisation and alternative use of different protein subdomains modulate sequence selection and target site specificity of the binding partners [46]. In the glucagon promoter, the paired domain of PAX6 is sufficient for binding to G3, whereas the homeodomain is dispensable [47]. In contrast, both the paired domain and the homeodomain are essential for binding of PAX6 to G1 [47]. Therefore, PAX6 bound to G3 by the paired domain could tether ALX3 via interactions between their homeodomains, so that ALX3–PAX6 interactions involving homeodomain heterodimerisation would not disturb the paired domain-mediated binding of PAX6 to G3, thus providing stable transactivation from this element. Indeed, the interaction between the ALX3 homeodomain and the PAX6 paired domain may even contribute to binding [43–45]. This type of interaction between PAX6 and other homeodomain transcription factors has been shown to be important for transcriptional regulation [48]. In contrast, as the paired domain is not sufficient for PAX6 binding to G1 [47], use of the G1-bound PAX6 homeodomain after recruitment of ALX3 for heterodimerisation would preclude the use of PAX6 homeodomain for DNA binding, thus destabilising the protein–DNA interaction at this site.
The mechanism by which Alx3 expression is stimulated by glucose is unknown. In the case of intact islets, it cannot be excluded that insulin released from beta cells in response to glucose may contribute to downregulation of glucagon gene transcription. However, the results obtained from alphaTC1 cells, which retain important physiological features of intact alpha cells [5, 10, 49] strongly argue in favour of a direct effect of glucose on Alx3 expression.
Our findings may have implications for the aetiopathogenic mechanisms of diabetes. Dysfunctional glucagon hypersecretion contributing to hyperglycaemia has been recognised as an important factor in this disease [3, 4], suggesting the existence of impaired glucose-dependent inhibitory mechanisms affecting glucagon gene expression and hormone secretion. As ALX3 is important for the maintenance of glucose homeostasis in mice [29], it is possible that ALX3 loss-of-function mutations may contribute to dysregulated glucagon production in alpha cells.
Abbreviations
- ALX3:
-
Aristaless-like homeobox 3
- ALX3ΔC:
-
Truncated ALX3 excluding the carboxyl terminus
- ALX3ΔN:
-
Truncated ALX3 excluding the amino terminus of ALX3
- ALX3HD:
-
ALX3 homeodomain
- ChIP:
-
Chromatin immunoprecipitation
- EMSA:
-
Electrophoretic mobility shift assay
- GST:
-
Glutathione S-transferase
- PAX6:
-
Paired box 6
- PAX6PD:
-
Paired domain of PAX6
- qPCR:
-
Quantitative real-time PCR
- RNAi:
-
RNA interference
- siRNA:
-
small interfering RNA
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Acknowledgements
We thank I. Quesada (Miguel Hernandez University, Elche, Spain) for providing alphaTC1 cells, F Meijlink (Netherlands Institute for Developmental Biology, Utrecht, the Netherlands) for providing the Alx3-deficient mice from which our colony was established, and A. Fernández-Perez for assistance with islet isolation for ChIP assays.
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This work was funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO grants BFU2011-24245 and BFU2014-52149-R) and by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III. CIBERDEM is an initiative of the Instituto de Salud Carlos III.
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MM performed the experiments. MV designed the study and wrote the paper. Both authors analysed the data and revised and approved the final version of the paper before submission, and are responsible for the integrity of this work. MV is the guarantor of this work.
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Mirasierra, M., Vallejo, M. Glucose-dependent downregulation of glucagon gene expression mediated by selective interactions between ALX3 and PAX6 in mouse alpha cells. Diabetologia 59, 766–775 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-015-3849-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-015-3849-4