The neuronal immediate early gene Arc/Arg-3.1 is widely used as one of the most reliable molecular markers for intense synaptic activity in vivo. However, the cis-acting elements responsible for such stringent activity dependence have not been firmly identified. Here we combined luciferase reporter assays in cultured cortical neurons and comparative genome mapping to identify the critical synaptic activity-responsive elements (SARE) of the Arc/Arg-3.1 gene. A major SARE was found as a unique approximate to 100-bp element located at >5 kb upstream of the Arc/Arg-3.1 transcription initiation site in the mouse genome. This single element, when positioned immediately upstream of a minimal promoter, was necessary and sufficient to replicate crucial properties of endogenous Arc/Arg-3.1's transcriptional regulation, including rapid onset of transcription triggered by synaptic activity and low basal expression during synaptic inactivity. We identified the major determinants of SARE as a unique cluster of neuronal activity-dependent cis-regulatory elements consisting of closely localized binding sites for CREB, MEF2, and SRF. Consistently, a SARE reporter could readily trace and mark an ensemble of cells that have experienced intense activity in the recent past in vivo. Taken together, our work uncovers a novel transcriptional mechanism by which a critical 100-bp element, SARE, mediates a predominant component of the synapse-to-nucleus signaling in ensembles of Arc/Arg-3.1-positive activated neurons.
Journal article
Synaptic activity-responsive element in the Arc/Arg3.1 promoter essential for synapse-to-nucleus signaling in activated neurons
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol.106(1), pp.316-321
06/Jan/2009
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Synaptic activity-responsive element in the Arc/Arg3.1 promoter essential for synapse-to-nucleus signaling in activated neurons
- Creators
- Takashi Kawashima (null) - 972WIS_INST___123Hiroyuki Okuno (Corresponding Author) - The University of TokyoMio Nonaka (null) - The University of TokyoAki Adachi-Morishima (null) - The University of TokyoNan Kyo (null) - The University of TokyoMichiko Okamura (null) - The University of TokyoSayaka Takemoto-Kimura (null) - The University of TokyoPaul F. Worley (null) - Johns Hopkins UniversityHaruhiko Bito (null) - The University of Tokyo
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol.106(1), pp.316-321; 06/Jan/2009
- Number of pages
- 6
- Language
- English
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0806518106
- Grant note
- We thank H. Miyoshi and D. Trono for the lentiviral vector and packaging constructs, respectively; Dainippon Sumitomo Pharma (Osaka, Japan) for supply of BDNF through the courtesy of C. Nakayama and T. Ishiyama; C. Tohyama, M. Kakeyama, and W. Yoshioka (University of Tokyo) for technical help in qPCR analyses; T. Furukawa (Olympus-Japan) for assistance in building a live luciferase imaging microscope. We also thank all members of the Bito laboratory for support and discussion. We are particularly indebted to K. Saiki, Y. Kondo, and T. Kinbara for assistance. This work was supported in part by grants-in-aid from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (to H.O., M.O., S.T.-K., and H.B.) and from the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare (to H.O. and H.B.), by 21st century Center of excellence (COE) and Global COE programs (to H.B.), by a grant from National Institute of Mental Health (MH053608 to P.F.W.), and by awards from the Human Frontier Science Program Organization (career development award to H.O. and a program grant to H.B.), from the Takeda Foundation, from the Toray Science Foundation, and from the Yamada Science Foundation (to H.B.).
- Record Identifier
- 993266949403596
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