Different regions of the estrogen receptor are required for synergistic action with the glucocorticoid and progesterone receptors.
Open Access
- 1 December 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 9 (12) , 5324-5330
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.9.12.5324
Abstract
Estrogen and progesterone or estrogen and glucocorticoid receptors functionally cooperate in gene activation if their cognate binding sites are close to one another. These interactions have been described as synergism of action of the steroid receptors. The mechanism by which synergism is achieved is not clear, although protein-protein interaction of the receptors is one of the favorite models. In transfection experiments with receptor expression vectors and a reporter gene containing estrogen and progesterone-glucocorticoid receptor binding sites, we have examined the effects that different portions of the various receptors have on synergism. N-terminal domains of the chicken progesterone and human glucocorticoid receptors, when deleted, abolished the synergistic action of these receptors with the estrogen receptor. Deletion of the carboxy-terminal amino acids 341 to 595 of the estrogen receptor produced a mutant receptor that could not trans-activate on its own. This mutant receptor did not affect the action of the glucocorticoid receptor but functioned synergistically with the progesterone receptor. We therefore conclude that the synergistic action of the receptors for estrogen and progesterone is mechanistically different from the synergistic action of the receptors for estrogen and glucocorticoid.This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gene regulation by steroid hormonesCell, 1989
- Nuclear receptors enhance our understanding of transcription regulationTrends in Genetics, 1988
- The hormone-binding domains of the estrogen and glucocorticoid receptors contain an inducible transcription activation functionCell, 1988
- Synergism of closely adjacent estrogen-responsive elements increases their regulatory potentialJournal of Molecular Biology, 1988
- Differential gene activation by glucocorticoids and progestins through the hormone regulatory element of mouse mammary tumor virusCell, 1988
- Steroid receptor-mediated inhibition of rat prolactin gene expression does not require the receptor DNA-binding domainCell, 1988
- Oestrogen and glucocorticoid responsive elements are closely related but distinctNature, 1987
- Colocalization of DNA-binding and transcriptional activation functions in the human glucocorticoid receptorCell, 1987
- Human oestrogen receptor cDNA: sequence, expression and homology to v-erb-ANature, 1986
- A secreted glycoprotein induced by estrogen in human breast cancer cell linesCell, 1980