The transcription factors, Otx2, Crx, Nrl, and Nr2e3, expressed by
retinal photoreceptor cells are essential for photoreceptor gene
expression, development, and maintenance. Malfunction of any of these
factors due to genetic mutations causes photoreceptor disease.
Protein–protein interaction studies suggest that these factors may
form a regulatory network centered on Crx. To understand how these factors
regulate photoreceptor gene transcription in vivo, we have
employed chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays to assess the ability
of these proteins to bind to regulatory sequences of photoreceptor genes
in the retina of wild-type and mutant mice with photoreceptor
degeneration. This paper summarizes the advantages and limitations of
ChIP, using examples from our studies to demonstrate how this technique
has contributed to our understanding of the regulation of photoreceptor
gene expression. We report that Crx, Otx2, Nrl, and Nr2e3 co-occupy the
promoter/enhancer, but not the region 3′ of selected Crx target
genes, in a retina-specific fashion. We identified Crx-dependent (Nr2e3)
and Crx-independent (Otx2 and Nrl) target binding using Crx knockout mice
(Crx−/−), suggesting that individual factors
may use distinct mechanism(s) for binding and regulating target genes.
Consistent with ChIP results, we also found that Otx2, a close family
member of Crx, can activate the promoter of rod and cone genes in HEK293
cells, implicating Otx2 in regulating photoreceptor gene expression. These
findings provide important information for understanding how photoreceptor
transcription factors regulate photoreceptor gene expression and the
mechanisms by which mutations in these factors cause transcriptional
dysregulation and photoreceptor degeneration.