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This version published online on November 9, 2006
Molecular Endocrinology, doi:10.1210/me.2006-0307
A more recent version of this article appeared on February 1, 2007
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Submitted on July 28, 2006
Accepted on October 30, 2006

Insulin Represses PEPCK Gene Transcription by Causing the Rapid Disruption of an Active Transcription Complex: A Potential Epigenetic Effect

Robert K. Hall, Xiaohui L. Wang, Leena George, Stephen R. Koch, and Daryl K. Granner*

Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: daryl.granner{at}vanderbilt.edu.

Insulin represses gluconeogenesis, in part, by inhibiting the transcription of genes that encode rate-determining enzymes, such as phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) and glucose-6-phosphatase (G-6-Pase). Glucocorticoids stimulate expression of the PEPCK gene but the repressive action of insulin is dominant. Here, we show that treatment of H4IIE hepatoma cells with the synthetic glucocorticoid, dexamethasone (dex), induces the accumulation of glucocorticoid receptor (GR), as well as many transcription factors, coregulators, and RNA polymerase II (pol II), on the PEPCK gene promoter. The addition of insulin to dex-treated cells causes the rapid dissociation of GR, pol II, and several key transcriptional regulators from the PEPCK gene promoter. These changes are temporally related to the reduced rate of PEPCK gene transcription. A similar disruption of the G-6-Pase gene transcription complex was observed. Insulin causes the rapid demethylation of arginine-17 on histone H3 of both genes. This rapid, insulin-induced, histone demethylation is temporally related to the disruption of the PEPCK and G-6-Pase gene transcription complex, and may be causally related to the mechanism by which insulin represses transcription of these genes that encode gluconeogenic enzymes.


Key words: insulin • phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase • transcription • histone







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