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Mechanistic Aspects of Estrogen Receptor Activation Probed with Constitutively Active Estrogen Receptors: Correlations with DNA and Coregulator Interactions and Receptor Conformational Changes
The estrogen receptor (ER) belongs to a large family of nuclear receptors, many of whose members function as ligand-dependent transcriptional activators. The mechanism by which the receptor is converted from an inactive into an activated state is not yet completely understood. To investigate the kin...
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Published in: | Molecular endocrinology (Baltimore, Md.) Md.), 1997-08, Vol.11 (9), p.1375-1386 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The estrogen receptor (ER) belongs to a
large family of nuclear receptors, many of whose members function as
ligand-dependent transcriptional activators. The mechanism by which the
receptor is converted from an inactive into an activated state is not
yet completely understood. To investigate the kind of changes in
receptor conformation and interactions that are involved in this
activation, we have used the wild type ER and a set of constitutively
active ER point mutants that show from 20% to nearly 100% activity in
the absence of estrogen. These mutants are of particular interest as
they could mimic, in the absence of ligand, the activated state of the
wild type receptor. We have analyzed several transcriptional steps that
could be involved in the activation: the ability of these receptors 1)
to interact with several coactivators (steroid receptor coactivator-1,
SRC-1; transcription intermediary factor-1, TIF-1; and estrogen
receptor-associated protein 140, ERAP 140) and with members of the
preinitiation complex [TATA box-binding protein (TBP), transcription
factor IIB (TFIIB)]; 2) to exhibit conformational changes revealed by
proteolytic digest patterns similar to those observed for the wild type
hormone-occupied ER; and 3) to bend estrogen response
element-containing DNA, which is thought to be one of the important
phenomena triggering transcriptional activation. Our results
demonstrate that the interaction of these mutant receptors with
coactivators is likely to be one of the features of the activated step,
as the mutant receptors interacted with some coactivators in a
ligand-independent manner in proportion to their extent of constitutive
activity. However, the different degrees of ligand-independent
interaction of the mutant ERs with the three coactivators suggest that
SRC-1, TIF-1, and ERAP 140 may play different roles in receptor
activity. Limited proteolytic digest experiments reveal that the
activated state of the receptor corresponds to a particular
conformation of the receptor, which is fully observed with the mutant
ER showing the highest activity in the absence of estrogen. Finally, it
appears that in inactive or active states, the receptor exhibits
distinctly different DNA-bending abilities. Addition of estradiol is
able to modify the bending ability of only the wild type receptor,
whereas estradiol has no influence on the constitutive receptors, which
exhibited the same bending ability as that observed for the
ligand-occupied wild type recep |
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ISSN: | 0888-8809 1944-9917 |
DOI: | 10.1210/mend.11.9.9983 |