Zhang X, Jeyakumar M, Petukhov S, Bagchi M K
The Population Council and The Rockefeller University, New York, New York 10021, USA.
Mol Endocrinol. 1998 Apr;12(4):513-24. doi: 10.1210/mend.12.4.0089.
Synthetic steroid hormone antagonists are clinically important compounds that regulate physiological responses to steroid hormones. The antagonists bind to the hormone receptors, which are ligand-inducible transcription factors, and modulate their gene-regulatory activities. In most instances, a steroid receptor, such as progesterone receptor (PR) or estrogen receptor (ER), is transcriptionally inactive when complexed with an antagonist and competitively inhibits transactivation of a target steroid-responsive gene by the cognate hormone-occupied receptor. In certain cellular and promoter contexts, however, antagonist-occupied PR or ER acquires paradoxical agonist-like activity. The cellular mechanisms that determine the switch from the negative to the positive mode of transcriptional regulation by an antagonist-bound steroid receptor are unknown. We now provide strong evidence supporting the existence of a cellular inhibitory cofactor that interacts with the B form of human PR (PR-B) complexed with the antiprogestin RU486 to maintain it in a transcriptionally inactive state. In the presence of unliganded thyroid hormone receptor (TR) or ER complexed with the antiestrogen 4-hydroxytamoxifen, which presumably sequesters a limiting pool of the inhibitory cofactor, RU486-PR-B functions as a transcriptional activator of a progesterone-responsive gene even in the absence of hormone agonist. In contrast, hormone-occupied TR or ER fails to induce transactivation by RU486-PR-B. Recent studies revealed that a transcriptional corepressor, NCoR (nuclear receptor corepressor), interacts with unliganded TR but not with liganded TR. Interestingly, coexpression of NCoR efficiently suppresses the partial agonistic activity of antagonist-occupied PR-B but fails to affect transactivation by agonist-bound PR-B. We further demonstrate that RU486-PR-B interacts physically with NCoR in vitro. These novel observations suggest that the inhibitory cofactor that associates with RU486-PR-B and represses its transcriptional activity is either identical or structurally related to the corepressor NCoR. We propose that cellular mechanisms that determine the switch from the antagonistic to the agonistic activity of RU486-PR-B involve removal of the corepressor from the antagonist-bound receptor so that it can effect partial but significant gene activation.
合成类固醇激素拮抗剂是调节对类固醇激素生理反应的重要临床化合物。这些拮抗剂与激素受体结合,激素受体是配体诱导型转录因子,并调节其基因调控活性。在大多数情况下,类固醇受体,如孕酮受体(PR)或雌激素受体(ER),与拮抗剂结合时转录无活性,并竞争性抑制同源激素占据的受体对靶类固醇反应性基因的反式激活。然而,在某些细胞和启动子环境中,拮抗剂占据的PR或ER会获得矛盾的激动剂样活性。决定拮抗剂结合的类固醇受体从转录调节的负模式转换为正模式的细胞机制尚不清楚。我们现在提供了有力证据,支持存在一种细胞抑制性辅因子,它与人PR的B形式(PR-B)结合,该形式与抗孕激素RU486复合,使其保持在转录无活性状态。在存在未结合配体的甲状腺激素受体(TR)或与抗雌激素4-羟基他莫昔芬复合的ER的情况下,这可能会隔离有限的抑制性辅因子池,即使在没有激素激动剂的情况下,RU486-PR-B也可作为孕酮反应性基因的转录激活剂。相反,激素占据的TR或ER不能诱导RU486-PR-B的反式激活。最近的研究表明,转录共抑制因子NCoR(核受体共抑制因子)与未结合配体的TR相互作用,但不与结合配体的TR相互作用。有趣的是,NCoR的共表达有效地抑制了拮抗剂占据的PR-B的部分激动活性,但不影响激动剂结合的PR-B的反式激活。我们进一步证明,RU486-PR-B在体外与NCoR发生物理相互作用。这些新观察结果表明,与RU486-PR-B结合并抑制其转录活性的抑制性辅因子与共抑制因子NCoR相同或在结构上相关。我们提出,决定RU486-PR-B从拮抗活性转换为激动活性的细胞机制涉及从拮抗剂结合的受体中去除共抑制因子,以便它能够实现部分但显著的基因激活。