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-Deficient Mice
Division of Cell and Molecular Biology, Department of Biology, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: David J. Waxman, Department of Biology, Boston University, 5 Cummington Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02215. E-mail: djw{at}bu.edu.
Hepatocyte nuclear factor (HNF) 4
is a liverenriched nuclear receptor that plays a critical role in regulating the expression of numerous hepatic genes, including members of the cytochrome P450 (CYP) superfamily, several of which are expressed in a sex-dependent manner. Presently, we use a liver-specific Hnf4
-deficient mouse model to investigate the role of HNF4
in regulating liverenriched transcription factors and sexually dimorphic Cyps in liver in vivo. Real-time PCR analysis of RNA isolated from livers of wild-type and Hnf4
-deficient mice revealed the following: 1) HNF4
exerts both positive regulation (Hnf
, C/ebp
, and C/ebpß) and negative regulation (Hnf3
and the HNF4
coactivator Pgc-1
) on liver transcription factor expression; 2) a strong dependence on HNF4
characterizes several male-predominant Cyps (2d9 and 8b1), female-predominant Cyps (2b10, 2b13, 3a41, and 3a44) and Cyps, whose expression is sex independent (3a11, 3a25); 3) HNF4
confers a unique, positive regulation of two male-expressed genes (Cyp4a12 and GST
) and a negative regulation of several female-predominant genes (Cyp2a4, Cyp2b9, Hnf3ß, and Hnf6), both of which are manifest in male but not female mouse liver. These trends were confirmed at the protein level by Western blot analysis using antibodies raised to Cyp2a, Cyp2b, and Cyp3a family members. Thus, HNF4
is an essential player in the complex regulatory network of liver-enriched transcription factors and the sexually dimorphic mouse Cyp genes that they regulate. HNF4
is proposed to contribute to the sex specificity of liver gene expression by positively regulating a subset of male-specific Cyp genes while concomitantly inhibiting the expression of certain female-specific Cyps and liver transcription factors, by mechanisms that are operative in male, but not female, mouse liver.
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