4.8 Article

Structural and Functional Impacts of ER Coactivator Sequential Recruitment

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 67, Issue 5, Pages 733-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2017.07.026

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Komen Foundation [PG12221410]
  2. DOD [DAMD W81XWH-13-1-0285, W81XWH-15-1-0536]
  3. NIH(CNIHR) [HD8818, NIDDK59820, P41GM103832, R01GM079429, R21AI122418, R01GMGM072804]
  4. CPRIT [RP150648, DP150052]
  5. NCI Cancer Center [P30CA125123]

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Nuclear receptors recruit multiple coactivators sequentially to activate transcription. This ordered'' recruitment allows different coactivator activities to engage the nuclear receptor complex at different steps of transcription. Estrogen receptor (ER) recruits steroid receptor coactivator-3 (SRC-3) primary coactivator and secondary coactivators, p300/CBP and CARM1. CARM1 recruitment lags behind the binding of SRC-3 and p300 to ER. Combining cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM) structure analysis and biochemical approaches, we demonstrate that there is a close crosstalk between early-and late-recruited coactivators. The sequential recruitment of CARM1 not only adds a protein arginine methyltransferase activity to the ER-coactivator complex, it also alters the structural organization of the pre-existing ERE/ERa/SRC-3/p300 complex. It induces a p300 conformational change and significantly increases p300 HAT activity on histone H3K18 residues, which, in turn, promotes CARM1 methylation activity on H3R17 residues to enhance transcriptional activity. This study reveals a structural role for a coactivator sequential recruitment and biochemical process in ER-mediated transcription.

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