Williams G R, Franklyn J A
Department of Medicine, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, UK.
Baillieres Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1994 Apr;8(2):241-66. doi: 10.1016/s0950-351x(05)80251-4.
Glucocorticoids, other steroid hormones, thyroid hormones and vitamin-derived hormones (including retinoids) all exert their effects by the regulation of hormone-responsive target genes within the cell nucleus. These hormones bind to a series of specific nuclear receptor proteins that function as hormone-inducible transcription factors. The receptors are structurally homologous, are related to the avian erythroblastosis oncogene v-erbA, and exhibit remarkable evolutionary conservation. Together they form the steroid-thyroid hormone nuclear receptor superfamily. This chapter describes the structure and functions of the various family members and highlights the differences and similarities that occur between individual receptor proteins. Type I receptors, which include glucocorticoid receptor and other steroid receptor proteins, interact as homodimers with target sequences of DNA containing two receptor binding sites arranged as a palindrome. Type II receptors, which include receptors for retinoids, thyroid hormone and vitamin D3, bind as heterodimers (or homodimers) to DNA sequences in which two or more receptor-binding sites are arranged as a direct repeat or as other more complex configurations. The complexity of both receptor-DNA and receptor-receptor interactions predicts the potential for considerable cross-talk between various hormone-activated pathways. Thus, the specificity of hormone action and its regulation is discussed in relation to the structural and functional characteristics of the receptors and their molecular mechanisms of action. Finally, potential sites of regulation of hormone action, from circulating hormone levels in the periphery to their delivery to the cell and final site of action in the nucleus, are highlighted to provide a perspective for the following chapters in this volume and to indicate their clinical significance.
糖皮质激素、其他类固醇激素、甲状腺激素以及维生素衍生激素(包括视黄酸)均通过调节细胞核内的激素反应性靶基因来发挥作用。这些激素与一系列特定的核受体蛋白结合,这些蛋白作为激素诱导型转录因子发挥作用。这些受体在结构上具有同源性,与禽成红细胞增多症致癌基因v-erbA相关,并且表现出显著的进化保守性。它们共同构成了类固醇-甲状腺激素核受体超家族。本章描述了各个家族成员的结构和功能,并突出了各个受体蛋白之间的差异和相似之处。I型受体,包括糖皮质激素受体和其他类固醇受体蛋白,以同二聚体形式与含有两个呈回文排列的受体结合位点的DNA靶序列相互作用。II型受体,包括视黄酸、甲状腺激素和维生素D3的受体,以异二聚体(或同二聚体)形式与DNA序列结合,其中两个或更多受体结合位点呈直接重复或其他更复杂的构型排列。受体与DNA以及受体与受体之间相互作用的复杂性预示着各种激素激活途径之间存在大量相互干扰的可能性。因此,将结合受体的结构和功能特征及其分子作用机制来讨论激素作用的特异性及其调节。最后,强调了激素作用调节的潜在位点,从外周循环激素水平到其向细胞的传递以及在细胞核中的最终作用位点,以便为本卷后续章节提供一个视角并指出其临床意义。