» Articles » PMID: 15661830

Coactivator Proteins As Determinants of Estrogen Receptor Structure and Function: Spectroscopic Evidence for a Novel Coactivator-stabilized Receptor Conformation

Overview
Journal Mol Endocrinol
Date 2005 Jan 22
PMID 15661830
Citations 24
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The direct regulation of gene transcription by nuclear receptors, such as the estrogen receptor (ER), involves not just ligand and DNA binding but the recruitment of coregulators. Typically, recruitment of p160 coactivator proteins to agonist-liganded ER is considered to be unidirectional, with ligand binding stabilizing an ER ligand binding domain (LBD) conformation that favors coactivator interaction. Using fluorophore-labeled ERalpha-LBDs, we present evidence for a pronounced stabilization of ER conformation that results from coactivator binding, manifest by decreased ER sensitivity to proteases and reduced conformational dynamics, as well as for the formation of a novel coactivator-stabilized (costabilized) receptor conformation, that can be conveniently monitored by the generation of an excimer emission from pyrene-labeled ERalpha-LBDs. This costabilized conformation may embody features required to support ER transcriptional activity. Different classes of coactivator proteins combine with estrogen agonists of different structure to elicit varying degrees of this receptor stabilization, and antagonists and coactivator binding inhibitors disfavor the costabilized conformation. Remarkably, high concentrations of coactivators engender this conformation even in apo- and antagonist-bound ERs (more so with selective ER modulators than with pure antagonists), providing an in vitro model for the development of resistance to hormone therapy in breast cancer.

Citing Articles

Estrogen Receptor Alpha and ESR1 Mutations in Breast Cancer.

Patel J, Jeselsohn R Adv Exp Med Biol. 2022; 1390:171-194.

PMID: 36107319 DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-11836-4_10.


A mutant form of ERα associated with estrogen insensitivity affects the coupling between ligand binding and coactivator recruitment.

Li Y, Coons L, Houtman R, Carlson K, Martin T, Mayne C Sci Signal. 2020; 13(650).

PMID: 32963012 PMC: 7597377. DOI: 10.1126/scisignal.aaw4653.


The SERM/SERD bazedoxifene disrupts ESR1 helix 12 to overcome acquired hormone resistance in breast cancer cells.

Fanning S, Jeselsohn R, Dharmarajan V, Mayne C, Karimi M, Buchwalter G Elife. 2018; 7.

PMID: 30489256 PMC: 6335054. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.37161.


Specific stereochemistry of OP-1074 disrupts estrogen receptor alpha helix 12 and confers pure antiestrogenic activity.

Fanning S, Hodges-Gallagher L, Myles D, Sun R, Fowler C, Plant I Nat Commun. 2018; 9(1):2368.

PMID: 29915250 PMC: 6006285. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-04413-3.


Perfluoro-tert-butyl Homoserine Is a Helix-Promoting, Highly Fluorinated, NMR-Sensitive Aliphatic Amino Acid: Detection of the Estrogen Receptor·Coactivator Protein-Protein Interaction by F NMR.

Tressler C, Zondlo N Biochemistry. 2017; 56(8):1062-1074.

PMID: 28165218 PMC: 5894335. DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.6b01020.