A 3RD TRANSACTIVATION FUNCTION (AF3) OF HUMAN PROGESTERONE RECEPTORS LOCATED IN THE UNIQUE N-TERMINAL SEGMENT OF THE B-ISOFORM

被引:274
作者
SARTORIUS, CA
MELVILLE, MY
HOVLAND, AR
TUNG, L
TAKIMOTO, GS
HORWITZ, KB
机构
[1] UNIV COLORADO, HLTH SCI CTR, DEPT MED, DENVER, CO 80262 USA
[2] UNIV COLORADO, HLTH SCI CTR, DEPT PATHOL, DENVER, CO 80262 USA
[3] UNIV COLORADO, HLTH SCI CTR, PROGRAM MOLEC BIOL, DENVER, CO 80262 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1210/me.8.10.1347
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Human progesterone target tissues contain two progesterone receptors: B-receptors (hPR(B)), which are 933 amino acids in length, and A-receptors (hPR(A)), which lack the N-terminal 164 amino acids. The two isoforms differ functionally when they are occupied by agonists or antagonists. We postulated that the unique 164-amino acid, B-upstream segment (BUS) is in part responsible for the functional differences between the two isoforms and have constructed a series of hPR expression vectors encoding BUS fused to isolated down-stream functional domains of the receptors. These include the two transactivation domains: activation function-1 (AF1), located in a 90-amino acid segment just up-stream of the DNA-binding domain (DBD) and nuclear localization signal (NLS), and AF2, located in the hormone-binding domain. BUS is a highly phosphorylated domain, and contains the serine residues responsible for the hPR(B) triplet protein structure. The construct containing BUS-DBD-NLS binds tightly to DNA when aided by accessory nuclear factors. In HeLa cells, BUS-DBD-NLS strongly and autonomously activates transcription of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) from a promoter containing two progesterone response elements (PRE(2)-TATA(tk)-CAT). Transcription levels with BUS-DBD-NLS are equivalent to those seen with full length hPR(B), and are higher than those seen with hPR(A). BUS specifically requires an intact hPR DBD to be transcriptionally active. DBD mutants that cannot bind DNA or whose DNA binding specificity has been switched to an estrogen response element cannot cooperate in BUS transcriptional activity. The function of BUS-DBD-NLS is promoter and cell specific. It does not transactivate a CAT reporter driven by the mouse mammary tumor virus promoter in HeLa cells and poorly transactivates PRE(2)-TATA(tk)-CAT in PR-negative T47D breast cancer cells. However, in the breast cancer cells, BUS-DBD-NLS transactivation of PRE(2)-TATA(tk)-CAT can be reconstituted by either elevating cellular levels of cAMP or linking BUS and DBD to AF1 or AF2 of hPR, each of which alone is also inactive in these cells. We conclude that hPR(B) contains a unique third activation function (AF3) located within BUS and requiring the functional DBD of hPR. Depending on the promoter or cell tested, AF3 can activate transcription autonomously, or it can functionally synergize with AF1 or AF2. Autonomous AF3 function may explain the unexpected transactivating actions of antiprogestin-occupied hPR(B), an issue of importance in hormone-resistant breast cancers and in tissue-specific agonist-like effects of hormone antagonists.
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页码:1347 / 1360
页数:14
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