4.5 Article

The orphan nuclear receptor Ear-2 is a negative coregulator for thyroid hormone nuclear receptor function

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 7, Pages 2604-2618

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/MCB.20.7.2604-2618.2000

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [P30 DK050456, P30 DK50456] Funding Source: Medline

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Thyroid hormone (T3) nuclear receptors (TR) are ligand-dependent transcription factors which regulate growth, differentiation, and development. One emerging hypothesis suggests that TR mediate these diverse effects via a large network of coregulators. Recently, we found that TR-mediated transcriptional responses varied in six cell lines derived from different tissues. We therefore used human TR subtype beta 1 (TR beta 1) as bait to search for coregulators in human colon carcinoma RKO cells with a yeast two-hybrid system. RKO cells exhibited T3-dependent and -independent transcriptional activation. One of the three positive clones was identified as Ear-2, which is a distant member of the chick ovalbumin upstream promoter-transcription factors of the orphan nuclear receptor family. The physical interaction between Ear-2 and TR beta 1 was further confirmed by specific binding of Ear-2 to glutathione S-transferase-TR beta 1, In addition, Ear-2 was found to associate with TR beta 1 in cells. As a result of this physical interaction, binding of TR beta 1 to the T3 response elements was inhibited. Using reporter systems, we found that both the basal activation and the T3-dependent activation mediated by TP beta 1 were repressed by Ear-2 in CV1 cells. In RKO cells, however, the T3-independent transcriptional activity was more sensitive to the repression effect of Ear-2 than the T3-dependent transcriptional activity. The repression effect of Ear-2 was reversed by steroid hormone receptor coactivator I. These results suggest that TR-mediated responses reflect a balance of corepressors and coactivators in cells. These findings further strengthen the hypothesis that the diverse activities of TR are achieved via a large network of coregulators that includes Ear-2.

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