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Introduction Mesenchymal differentiation along the osteoblast, myocyte or adipocyte lineages presents an accessible, physiological system to study how transforming growth factor- (TGF- ) represses cell differentiation and regulates transcription. As these programs progress, cells sequentially express genes that characterize the differentiated osteoblast, myocyte or adipocyte. TGF- inhibits the progression of differentiation through functional repression of key transcription factors (Alliston et al, 2001; Liu et al, 2001, 2004; Choy and Derynck, 2003).
During osteoblast differentiation, cells activate the Runx2 (Cbfa1) transcription factor and subsequently express osteocalcin and Osterix. Induction of Runx2 expression is critical in osteoblast differentiation, as it is required for the expression of osteocalcin and other proteins that allow osteoblasts to mineralize collagen I-rich matrix to form bone. Without Runx2, osteoblasts do not differentiate and cannot form bone (Harada and Rodan, 2003).
Osteoblasts secrete TGF- into the bone matrix and respond to it, thereby enabling autocrine regulation. TGF- stimulates preosteoblast proliferation, while inhibiting full differentiation. Accordingly, TGF- inhibits expression of osteocalcin and other markers of osteoblast function (Alliston and Derynck, 2000). A key event in this inhibition is the repression of Runx2 function by TGF- , thereby downregulating the expression of Runx2 target genes, such as osteocalcin and Runx2 (Alliston et al, 2001).
The Smads act as effectors of the TGF- -induced changes in gene expression. Binding of TGF- to its T RI/T RII receptor complex at the cell surface activates Smad2 and 3 through phosphorylation, which then form complexes with Smad4 and translocate into the nucleus. These complexes associate with transcription factors and bind DNA to regulate gene expression. This versatility in transcription factor interactions, together with the ability of activated Smads to recruit the coactivators CBP or p300, is the basis for the context-dependent activation of gene expression in response to TGF- (Feng and Derynck, 2005).
Much less is known about repression of transcription by TGF- and it is not known what defines whether a target gene is to be activated or repressed by TGF- . Corepressors such as TGIF, Evi-1, c-Ski, and SnoN can interact with Smads and recruit histone deacetylases (HDAC) into the transcription machinery; however, these inhibit Smad-activated transcription and do not confer repression by TGF- (Feng and Derynck, 2005). Only few examples of TGF- -mediated repression have been studied. TGF- represses myogenesis through association of Smad3 with bHLH transcription factors, such as MyoD, thus interfering with MyoD/E protein dimerization and interaction of MyoD with E-box sequences (Liu et al, 2001). Smad3 also associates with mouse embryo fibroblast (MEF)2, thereby blocking the interaction of MEF2 with the coactivator GRIP1, which is required for MEF2's functions as transcription coactivator for myogenic bHLH proteins (Liu et al, 2004). HDACs are not involved in either mechanism. In the repression of c-myc by TGF- , a complex of Smad3 with p107-E2F4/5-DP1 associates with Smad4 and translocates into the nucleus, where it binds c-myc regulatory sequences (Chen et al, 2002). While p107 and E2F4 can form a complex with HDAC1 independently of TGF- (Ferreira et al, 1998), no evidence for HDAC-dependent repression by TGF- was reported. Finally, BMP4 can repress the activity of Nkx3.2. Nkx3.2 binds HDAC1 and binding of BMP-activated Smad1 to another Nkx3.2 segment stabilizes the Nkx3.2/HDAC1 interaction (Kim and Lassar, 2003). In neither case were Smads shown to recruit HDACs.
The association of Smads with coactivators, such as CBP/p300, Mediator components or SMIF, may induce chromatin remodeling, as histone acetylation has been correlated with transcriptional activation (Berger, 2002), and CBP and p300 are acetyltransferases (Kouzarides, 2000). Conversely, recruitment of HDACs at sites of Smad-mediated transcriptional repression may lead to deacetylation of histones. No evidence for Smad-mediated changes in histone acetylation or chromatin structure has been reported.
We reported that TGF- inhibits Runx2 function through direct interaction of Smad3 with Runx2 at Runx2-binding DNA sequences of osteoblast differentiation genes, for example, the osteocalcin and runx2 genes, without decreasing DNA binding of Runx2. This inhibition results in transcription repression at the osteocalcin promoter and inhibition of osteoblast differentiation (Alliston et al, 2001). We now address the mechanism through which TGF- /Smad3 represses Runx2 function and osteocalcin expression. The class IIa HDACs HDAC4 and/or 5 were directly recruited by Smad3 to Runx2, thereby forming a stable complex of Smad3, Runx2, and HDAC(s) at the Runx2-binding DNA sequence. This mechanism is in contrast to the repression of myogenic transcription by TGF- /Smad3, which does not involve HDAC recruitment. Decreasing the functional levels of these HDACs enhanced osteoblast differentiation, suggesting an intrinsic role of class IIa HDACs, in cooperation with Smads, in osteoblast differentiation.
Results Repression of Runx2 by TGF- requires HDAC activity
To examine whether repression of Runx2 by TGF- at the Runx2-binding site OSE2 (Alliston et al, 2001) involves HDAC activity, we examined the effect of trichostatin A (TSA), an inhibitor of class I and class II HDACs (Yoshida et al, 1990). As reported (Alliston et al, 2001), Runx2 activated transcription from the 6OSE2 promoter and this activation was repressed by TGF- (Figure 1A). Increasing TSA levels overcame this repression and reversed it to activation in response to TGF- . TSA also increased the reporter activity without added TGF- (Figure 1A), likely a reflection of a balance between acetylation and deacetylation and/or autocrine TGF- signaling. TSA did not significantly affect the activation of transcription from the 3TP or Smad7 promoters (Figure 1B and C). TSA also inhibited the repression of endogenous osteocalcin mRNA levels by TGF- in ROS17/2.8 osteosarcoma cells (Figure 1D). These results indicate that class I or II HDAC activity is required for repression of Runx2 function by TGF- , and suggest a correlation of transcriptional repression with histone deacetylation.
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Discussion We have shown that TGF- inhibits osteoblast differentiation through Smad3-mediated repression of Runx2 function (Alliston et al, 2001). We now address the mechanism of Smad3-mediated repression of Runx2 at the osteocalcin promoter. Our results lead to several conclusions. (1) TGF- -activated Smad3 regulates chromatin remodeling, correlating repression and activation by Smad3 with histone deacetylation and acetylation, respectively. (2) At the osteocalcin promoter, TGF- -activated Smad3 represses Runx2 through direct recruitment of class IIa HDACs, such as HDAC4 and 5. (3) We provide evidence that the control of chromatin remodeling through acetylation and deacetylation regulates the progression of osteoblast differentiation. (4) Class IIa HDACs act as cell-intrinsic regulators of osteoblast differentiation.
Linking histone acetylation and deacetylation to TGF- -induced transcription regulation
Transcription levels depend on the dynamic state of histone acetylation. Histone acetylation correlates generally with transcriptionally active genes, while repression correlates with histone deacetylation by corepressors (Berger, 2002). This notion has been applied to the regulation of gene expression by extracellular signals. Thus, activation of nuclear receptors induces histone acetylation to activate genes through recruitment of p300 or CBP with their intrinsic acetylase activities, yet can also result in class I HDAC recruitment, with consequent histone deacetylation and repression (Glass and Rosenfeld, 2000). Thus, nuclear receptors can act as platforms for acetylases and deacetylases, from which chromatin remodeling is initiated. Class II HDACs have not been shown to initiate chromatin remodeling.
Smads have not been shown to be linked to chromatin remodeling. Such role is, however, suggested by their ability to recruit the CBP or p300 acetyltransferases, or corepressors that associate with class I HDACs (e.g., Evi-1, c-Ski, and SnoN) and inhibit transcription activation (Feng and Derynck, 2005). We now show that TGF- induces, through Smad3 interaction with regulatory DNA sequences, changes in histone acetylation of target genes. In the same cells, TGF- promotes histone acetylation to activate Smad7 expression, and deacetylation to repress osteocalcin transcription. The acetylation of the Smad7 promoter and equally rapid deacetylation of the osteocalcin promoter occur with a similar timing as TGF- -induced DNA binding of Smads (Inman et al, 2002). Thus, similarly to nuclear receptors, Smads function as ligand-activated platforms that mediate histone acetylation and deacetylation and initiate chromatin remodeling. Unlike nuclear receptors, however, Smad3 recruits class IIa HDACs, thereby bypassing a requirement for additional corepressors. Whether Smads mediate histone acetylation or deacetylation, and activate or repress transcription, depends on the regulatory sequences and interactions with other transcription factors. Thus, in contrast to the OSE2 sequence of the osteocalcin promoter, Smad3 can cooperate with Runx1 at the regulatory sequences of the germline Ig gene promoter to enhance histone H4 acetylation (data not shown) and activate transcription (Zhang and Derynck, 2000; Alliston et al, 2001).
Smad3-mediated recruitment of class IIa HDACs effects repression
Little is known about the mechanisms of Smad-mediated repression, and Smads have not been shown to recruit HDACs into transcription complexes. Thus, TGF- /Smad3 blocks MyoD and MEF2 functions through interference with protein interactions (Liu et al, 2001, 2004), resulting in HDAC-independent repression. In the repression of c-myc transcription by TGF- , Smad3 interacts with E2F4/5-p107 at c-myc regulatory sequences, but HDACs were not shown to be involved (Chen et al, 2002). In BMP-mediated repression of Nkx3.2 function, Smad1 stabilizes the interaction of HDAC1 with Nkx3.2, but was not reported to interact with HDAC1 (Kim and Lassar, 2003).
We now show that class IIa HDACs are recruited by Smad3 into a complex at a Runx2-binding site in the osteocalcin promoter, where Runx2 stabilizes the Smad3/HDAC interaction and Smad3 stabilizes the Runx2/HDAC association. Thus, the interaction of Smad3 and Runx2 at the promoter is a prerequisite for efficient class IIa HDAC recruitment and TGF- -dependent repression. As class IIa HDACs and Smads both shuttle between nucleus and cytoplasm, HDAC/Smad complexes may form prior to nuclear translocation and binding to Runx2 at promoter sequences. The low-level interaction of HDAC4 with Runx2 in the absence of added TGF- , yet in the presence of autocrine TGF- /Smad3 signaling (intrinsic in most cells), was recently reported by Vega et al (2004).
We found that HDAC4 and 5, which are both expressed in mesenchymal cells and osteoblasts, mediate, possibly in combination with other class IIa HDACs, the repression of Runx2 by TGF- . Since both HDACs interacted similarly with Smad3, we assume that Smad3 can interact with all class IIa HDACs to mediate TGF- -induced transcription repression in different cell types. Thus, HDAC7 could mediate TGF- -induced repression in T lymphocytes through cooperation of Smad3 with Runx transcription factors (Pardali et al, 2000; Zhang and Derynck, 2000). In contrast to class IIa HDACs, class I HDACs and the class IIb HDAC6 did not cooperate with TGF- in the repression of Runx2.
While we provide the first evidence for HDAC recruitment by Smads, an uncharacterized deacetylase activity was shown to interact with the MH1 domain of Smad3 (Liberati et al, 2001). The interactions of HDAC4 and 5 with the MH2 domain of Smad3 suggest that class IIa HDAC recruitment does not account for this activity.
A controlled balance between histone acetylation and deacetylation in osteoblast differentiation
The role of histone modifications in regulating transcription suggests that a signal-mediated balance between histone acetylation and deacetylation on specific genes controls differentiation. In osteoblast differentiation, histone H3 and H4 acetylation has been correlated with osteocalcin gene transcription. Thus, vitamin D3 enhances osteocalcin gene expression through increased histone H3/H4 acetylation at its promoter (Shen et al, 2003). We now show that TGF- represses osteocalcin expression by promoting histone deacetylation through recruitment of class IIa HDACs by Smad3, and that this event contributes to the inhibition of osteoblast maturation. These observations support the notion that a controlled balance of histone acetylation and deacetylation regulates osteoblast differentiation.
HDAC4 and 5 have been shown to regulate myogenic differentiation through their association with MEF2 (Lu et al, 2000; McKinsey et al, 2000), but no effects of HDAC4/5 binding to MEF2 on the histone acetylation status of myogenic regulatory sequences were shown. During the preparation of this manuscript, HDAC4 was shown to be made in prehypertrophic chondrocytes and regulate chondrocyte hypertrophy by inhibiting the activity of Runx2, thus affecting endochondral bone formation (Vega et al, 2004). We now show that HDAC4 and/or 5 regulate Runx2 activity, osteocalcin promoter acetylation, and osteoblast differentiation, depending on TGF- /Smad3 signaling. Consistent with these results, HDAC4 and 5 are expressed in developing bone, primary osteoblasts, and preosteoblast-like cell lines. In (pre)osteoblasts, HDAC4 and 5 are coexpressed with Runx2 (Figure 4), while Smad3 and TGF- receptors are also expressed in preosteoblasts (Sakou et al, 1999). Thus, the coexpression of these effectors in preosteoblasts supports an autocrine regulation of Runx2 function and chromatin remodeling in osteogenic differentiation.
Interference with the HDAC4/5 interaction with Smad3 blocked the repression of osteocalcin expression by TGF- and enhanced osteoblast differentiation. Since HDAC5(931–1121) interfered with the association of HDAC4 and 5 with Smad3, it likely also disrupts possible interactions of other class IIa HDACs, such as HDAC9 (Zhou et al, 2001), whose expression in osteoblasts was not evaluated. The striking effect of the dominant-negative, as well as siRNA-mediated, interference on differentiation thus identifies class IIa HDACs as cell-intrinsic regulators of osteoblast differentiation. These effects were strikingly similar to the effects of interference with Smad3 function, which enhances osteoblast differentiation and inhibits the repression of osteocalcin expression and osteoblast differentiation by TGF- (Alliston et al, 2001). It is therefore likely that the cell-intrinsic regulation by class IIa HDACs is linked to their role in autocrine TGF- /Smad3 repression of Runx2 function. Further studies will clarify in detail the roles of class IIa HDACs in osteoblast differentiation.
Materials and methods Plasmids
The reporter plasmids 6OSE2-luc and -147OC-luc (Alliston et al, 2001), 3TP-Luc (Carcamo et al, 1995) and Smad7Pro-Luc (Nagarajan et al, 1999) were described. The Gal4-Luc (FR-Luc) reporter was from Stratagene.
Expression vectors for HDAC1–7 (Grozinger et al, 1999; Miska et al, 1999; Fischle et al, 2001) were provided by S Schreiber, T Kouzarides, and E Verdin. To generate tagged HDAC4 or 5, or deletion mutants of HDAC5, PCR-generated coding regions were inserted into the EcoRI/XbaI sites of pXF1F or pXF1H (Feng et al, 1998). To generate a retroviral vector expressing HA-tagged HDAC5(931–1131), the PCR-generated coding region was inserted into the HpaI site of LPCX (Choy et al, 2000). N-terminally Flag-tagged Smad3 and derivatives were expressed from pRK5 (Zhang et al, 1998). Expression plasmids for Flag-tagged Runx2 (Alliston et al, 2001), GST-fused Smads or Smad fragments (Zhang et al, 1998), HA-RIRII, that is, a chimera of the T RII and T RI cytoplasmic domains (Feng and Derynck, 1996), and Gal–Smad3 (Feng et al, 1998) were described. Details of plasmid constructions will be provided upon request.
Cell culture and transfections
Primary osteoblasts were isolated from the calvariae of 2-day-old mice as described (Alliston et al, 2001). NIH3T3 and ROS17/2.8 cells were grown in DMEM with 10% FBS. Smad3-/- and wt MEFs were cultured in DMEM with 20% FBS. Cells were plated at 2 105 cells/well in six-well plates and transfected using Effectene reagents (Qiagen). At 1 day after transfection, cells were transferred to medium with 0.2% FBS with or without 1–5 ng/ml TGF- for 16 h. Luciferase activities were assayed for and normalized to -galactosidase from a cotransfected -galactosidase plasmid.
Chromatin immunoprecipitations
To examine the changes in acetylation on the indicated genes, ROS17/2.8 cells were treated with or without 5 ng/ml TGF- , and ChIP assays were carried out using anti-acetylated H3 or H4 antibodies (Upstate Biotechnologies) as described (Liu et al, 2004). To detect HDAC4 at the osteocalcin promoter, ROS17/2.8 cells were treated with 5 ng/ml TGF- for 4 h, followed by ChIP assay using anti-HDAC4 antibody (Abcam). For HDAC5, ROS17/2.8 cells transfected to express Flag-tagged HDAC5 were subjected to ChIP assay using anti-Flag antibody (Sigma). The PCR primers were: rat osteocalcin promoter, 5'-GCAGCTCCGGGAAGAGGTCTG-3' (forward) and 5'-GCTAGGTCTGCACCGAGTTGC-3' (reverse); rat Smad7 promoter, 5'-CTCTGTAGACCTGGGAGAGGGTGG-3' (forward) and 5'-CCCTCCGCTCGGCTGGTTCCACT-3' (reverse).
Immunoprecipitations and immunoblotting
Transfected COS cells were lysed by sonication in 25 mM Tris–HCl, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 1% Triton X-100, 10% glycerol, and protease inhibitor cocktail. Lysates were subjected to immunoprecipitation with anti-Flag M2 agarose (Sigma), followed by Western blotting using anti-Flag (Sigma), anti-HA (Covance), or anti-Myc (Roche Molecular Biochemicals) antibodies. To show a Runx2/Smad3/HDAC5 complex, lysates were subjected to immunoprecipitation with anti-Flag M2 agarose (Sigma) and immune complexes were eluted with Flag peptide (Sigma). Eluates were immunoprecipitated with anti-Myc (Covance) followed by Western blotting. To detect endogenous protein interactions, ROS17/2.8 cells were cultured for 3 h in DMEM with 0.2% FBS with or without 10 ng/ml TGF- . Cells were harvested and lysed by sonication in HKMG buffer (Chen et al, 2001). The lysates were precleared with IgG and immunoprecipitated with rabbit anti-Smad3 (Zymed), anti-HDAC5 (Abcam), or IgG (Zymed), followed by Western blotting using mouse anti-Smad2/3 (BD Transduction Laboratories), rabbit anti-HDAC4 (Cell Signaling Technologies), rabbit anti-HDAC5 (Cell Signaling Technologies), or rabbit anti-Runx2 (Santa Cruz Biotech).
GST adsorption and DNA precipitation assays
Binding of 35S-labeled HDAC4 and 5 to GST fusion proteins of Smads was determined as described (Liu et al, 2001). For DNA precipitation assays, transfected COS cells expressing Runx2, HDAC5, Smad3, and/or Smad4 were lysed by sonication in HKMG buffer (Chen et al, 2001) and lysates were processed as described (Liu et al, 2004) using biotinylated double-strand 2xOSE2 oligonucleotide (Alliston et al, 2001).
In situ hybridization
Mouse HDAC4 and 5 cDNAs were generated by PCR amplication of mouse brain cDNA using primers for human HDAC4 (bp 19–627) or 5 (bp 1210–1532) (Grozinger et al, 1999). The cDNA segments to generate osteocalcin and Runx2 cRNAs have been described (Ferguson et al, 1999). In situ hybridization was performed using 35S-labeled cRNAs as described (Ferguson et al, 1999). Sections were counterstained with DAPI to visualize the nuclei. Dark-field illumination was used to reveal in situ labeling.
RNA isolation and RT–PCR
RNA was isolated from ROS17/2.8, MC3T3-E1, or caIB 2T3 cells (Alliston et al, 2001), and used as a template for reverse trancriptase and random hexamer primers. For PCR amplification of HDAC4 and 5 sequences, the primer sequences were: HDAC4, 5'-CAGATGGACTTTCTGGCCG-3' (forward) and 5'-GAGCTGCTGCAGCTTCTG-3' (reverse); HDAC5, 5'-TCGCACCTCACCGCCTCCCCGAAGCTG-3' (forward) and 5'-AGAGGTCGGTGCCTCGGGAGCTTACCCACCGT -3' (reverse).
RNA interference
dsRNAi to target rat or mouse HDAC4 or 5 expression was synthesized by Dharmacon or Qiagen. The coding sequences were: HDAC4, 5'-GAACAUAUCAAGCAGCAGCdTdT-3'; rat HDAC5, 5'-GGAUGGCACUGUUAUUAGUdTdT-3'; mouse HDAC5, 5'-CGGCCUCGGAACCCAACUU. dsRNAi to GFP or Renilla luciferase (Dharmacon) was used as control. ROS17/2.8 cells were transfected with dsRNAi using Oligofectamine (Invitrogen) three times with 48-h intervals, transferred to DMEM with 0.2% FBS with or without 2 ng/ml TGF- for 24 h, and RNA was prepared using RNeasy (Qiagen). mRNAs were quantified by real-time PCR using TaqMan probes and the ABI Prism 7000 system (Applied Biosystems), and normalized against GAPDH or RPL19 mRNA. Primer and probe sequences for osteocalcin, GAPDH, and RPL19 mRNAs are available upon request. For Western analysis, ROS17/2.8 cells, transfected with dsRNAi twice with 48-h intervals, were analysed using rabbit anti-HDAC4 or -HDAC5 antibodies (Cell Signaling Technologies).
Generation of stable cell lines
ROS17/2.8 cells were transfected with pRK5-HA-HDAC5(931–1121) or empty pRK5, and a puromycin resistance gene using Effectene reagents (Qiagen), and selected in 2 g/ml puromycin for 1–2 weeks. caIB 2T3 cell populations expressing HA-tagged HDAC5 (931–1121) were infected using a LPCX-based retroviral vector (Choy et al, 2000). Expression levels of HDAC5(931–1121) were verified using Western blotting.
Osteoblast differentiation
Infected caIB 2T3 cells were grown in -MEM, 10% FBS, 2 g/ml puromycin, and transfected with dsRNAi twice at 48-h intervals using Oligofectamine (Invitrogen). Lysates were immunoprecipitated using rabbit anti-HDAC4 and -HDAC5 (Cell Signaling Technologies), followed by Western analysis. For differentiation, cells were transferred upon confluence into -MEM, 2% FBS, 100 g/ml ascorbic acid, 5 mM -glycerophosphate with or without 1 ng/ml TGF- . mRNA was analyzed after 6 days (Alliston et al, 2001) and mineralization was assayed at day 11 using Alizarin Red-S (Beck et al, 1998).
Acknowledgements
We thank T Kouzarides, S Schreiber and E Verdin for plasmids, and D Hu for help with in situ hybridization. This research was supported by grants RO1-CA63101 and P60 DE13058 to RD and a Hulda Irene Duggan Arthritis Investigator award to TA.
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