Estrogen Receptor Microarrays: Subtype-Selective Ligand Binding
- 25 March 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of the American Chemical Society
- Vol. 126 (15) , 4754-4755
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ja039586q
Abstract
We present the first example of a nuclear hormone receptor microarray, using for illustration the ligand-binding domains of the two estrogen receptors, ERα-LBD and ERβ-LBD. The proteins are printed and allowed to attach to aldehyde slides; the efficiency of attachment depends on whether the LBD is liganded with agonists (low attachment) versus liganded with antagonists or unliganded (high attachment). This suggests that attachment is orientation specific and involves principally a single lysine residue. The attached ERs retain good ligand-binding activity that can be assessed using an estradiol-fluorophore conjugate, and specific and ER subtype-selective binding of ligands can be determined conveniently in competitive binding assays. This powerful new, high-throughput technique to study ligand binding to ER-LBDs can be extended to other nuclear hormone receptors and adapted to assay the recruitment of coregulator proteins.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Molecular Sensors of Estrogen Receptor Conformations and DynamicsMolecular Endocrinology, 2003
- Protein microarrays: new tools for pharmaceutical developmentAnalytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, 2003
- Cell-Free Ligand Binding Assays for Nuclear ReceptorsPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Estrogen Receptor-β Potency-Selective Ligands: Structure−Activity Relationship Studies of Diarylpropionitriles and Their Acetylene and Polar AnaloguesJournal of Medicinal Chemistry, 2001
- Protein microarrays: prospects and problemsChemistry & Biology, 2001
- Pyrazole Ligands: Structure−Affinity/Activity Relationships and Estrogen Receptor-α-Selective AgonistsJournal of Medicinal Chemistry, 2000
- Rapid screening of environmental chemicals for estrogen receptor binding capacity.Environmental Health Perspectives, 1998
- Molecular basis of agonism and antagonism in the oestrogen receptorNature, 1997
- Uterine, cytoplasmic estrogen binding protein. Thermal stability and ligand dissociation rate. Assay of empty and filled sites by exchangeBiochemistry, 1973