4.5 Article

Mutual antagonism of estrogen receptors α and β and their preferred interactions with steroid receptor coactivators in human osteoblastic cell lines

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 176, Issue 3, Pages 349-357

Publisher

SOC ENDOCRINOLOGY
DOI: 10.1677/joe.0.1760349

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Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [CA09441] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIA NIH HHS [P01-AG04875] Funding Source: Medline

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Estrogen is a major sex steroid that affects the growth, maintenance, and homeostasis of the skeleton. Two isoforms of the estrogen receptor (ERalpha and ERbeta) mediate the transcriptional effects of estrogen. Although both isoforms of ER are present and functional in some human osteoblast (OB) cell lines, there is minimal iriformation on the differential regulation of transcription by ERalpha and ERbeta homo- or heterodimers. This report demonstrates that ERalpha and ERbeta coexpression decreases the transcriptional capacity (relative to each ER isoform alone) on an estrogen response element-dependent reporter gene in OBs but not in other non-osteoblastic cell lines. These data suggest that ERalpha and ERbeta coexpression can differentially influence the degree of transcriptional activation in certain cell types. Interestingly, the overexpression of the steroid hormone receptor coactivator-1 (SRC 1) resulted in preferential transcriptional enhancement by ERP as well as coexpressed ERalpha and ERbeta, whereas SRC2 overexpression appeared to preferentially enhance ERa transactivation. SRC3 overexpression failed to enhance estrogen-dependent transcription of any Ek combination in OBs. Similar overexpression experiments in COS7 cells exhibited preferential enhancement of Ekalpha function with all SRCs, including SRC3. Our data also demonstrated that SRC3 mRNA is reduced in ostcoblastic cells, suggesting that SRC3 may have only a minor role in these cells. These data suggest that the transactivation capacity of various ER isoforms is both SRC species and cell type dependent.

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