| Literature DB >> 20814439 |
Navin Viswakarma1, Yuzhi Jia, Liang Bai, Aurore Vluggens, Jayme Borensztajn, Jianming Xu, Janardan K Reddy.
Abstract
Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)alpha, beta (also known as delta), and gamma function as sensors for fatty acids and fatty acid derivatives and control important metabolic pathways involved in the maintenance of energy balance. PPARs also regulate other diverse biological processes such as development, differentiation, inflammation, and neoplasia. In the nucleus, PPARs exist as heterodimers with retinoid X receptor-alpha bound to DNA with corepressor molecules. Upon ligand activation, PPARs undergo conformational changes that facilitate the dissociation of corepressor molecules and invoke a spatiotemporally orchestrated recruitment of transcription cofactors including coactivators and coactivator-associated proteins. While a given nuclear receptor regulates the expression of a prescribed set of target genes, coactivators are likely to influence the functioning of many regulators and thus affect the transcription of many genes. Evidence suggests that some of the coactivators such as PPAR-binding protein (PBP/PPARBP), thyroid hormone receptor-associated protein 220 (TRAP220), and mediator complex subunit 1 (MED1) may exert a broader influence on the functions of several nuclear receptors and their target genes. Investigations into the role of coactivators in the function of PPARs should strengthen our understanding of the complexities of metabolic diseases associated with energy metabolism.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20814439 PMCID: PMC2929611 DOI: 10.1155/2010/250126
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PPAR Res Impact factor: 4.964
Figure 1A schematic representation of ligand-dependent recruitment of coactivators for PPAR-regulated target gene transcription. In the absence of ligand, the PPAR-RXR heterodimer recruits corepressors, which in turn, assemble additional components of a repressor complex including histone deacetylase (HDAC). When ligand (yellow trapezium representing PPAR ligand, and blue trapezium representing 9-cis-retinoic acid as RXR ligand) binds, conformational changes in PPAR-RXR induce dissociation of corepressor complex. Active transcriptional complex assembles with coactivator proteins either sequentially or preassembled subcomplex modules. PPAR binds to peroxisome proliferator response element (PPRE) and assemble coactivator complexes that acetylate (SRCs, p300) or methylate (CARM1) nucleosomes for chromatin remodeling. Mediator components [36, 37] contact PPARs and facilitate the recruitment of the basal transcription machinery (TATA-box-binding protein [TBP]/TBP-associated factors [TAFs]) to form linkage with RNA polymerase II for transcription of specific target genes.
Some known coactivator and coactivator associated proteins that regulate PPAR function.
| Coactivator proteins | Enzyme activity | Function | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| SRC-1/NCoA-1 | HAT | Histone acetylation | [ |
| SRC-2/TIF2/GRIP1 | HAT | Histone acetylation | [ |
| SRC3/pCIP/AIB1 | HAT | Histone acetylation | [ |
| CBP/p300 | HAT | Histone acetylation followed by recruitment of p160/SRCs | [ |
| MED1/TRAP220/PBP | None | Anchor for Mediator complex | [ |
| PGC-1 | None | Recruit coactivator with HAT activities | [ |
| PGC-1 | None | Recruit coactivator with HAT activities | [ |
| PRIP/NCoA6 | None | Recruit ASC complex | [ |
| PRIC285 | Helicase | Chromatin remodeling by histone displacement and nucleosomal sliding | [ |
| PRIC320/CHD9 | Helicase | Chromatin remodeling by histone displacement and nucleosomal sliding | [ |
| SWI/SNF | ATPase | ATP dependent mobilization of nucleosome | [ |
| BAF60a/SMARCD1 | None | Recruit SWI/SNF complex | [ |
| BAF60c/SMARCD3 | None | Recruit SWI/SNF complex | [ |
|
| |||
| Coactivator-associated proteins | |||
|
| |||
| PIMT/NCoA6IP | Methyltransferase | Methylation of caps of snRNAs and snoRNAs | [ |
| CARM1/PRMT4 | Methyltransferase | Potentiate SRCs by methylation of Histone H3 | [ |
| CoAA | None | RNA splicing | [ |
Figure 2(a–h) Peroxisome proliferation in liver cells of wild-type (WT), SRC-1−/− SRC-2−/− and SRC-3−/− mice treated with Wy-14,643 for 4 days. Liver sections were processed for the cytochemical localization of peroxisomal catalase by using alkaline 3′,3′-diaminobenzidine substrate. Control diet (upper panels; a, c, e, g). Wy-14,643 diet (lower panels; b, d, f, h). Peroxisomes appear as brown dots (arrows) distributed throughout the cytoplasm in these 0.5 μm thick sections. All mice, wild-type and SRC nulls displayed extensive peroxisome proliferation after treatment with Wy-14, 643 indicating that these coactivators are not required for PPARα-regulated pleiotropic responses including fatty acid oxidation. (i) Northern blot analysis to confirm changes in mRNA expression of peroxisomal and microsomal fatty acid metabolizing enzymes in wild-type and SRC nulls after 4-days treatment with PPARα ligand Wy-14, 643. All genes are regulated by PPARα. Fatty acyl-CoA oxidase-1 (ACOX1), peroxisomal enoyl-CoA hydratase/3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase bifunctional enzyme (L-PBE), and peroxisomal thiolase (PTL) represent peroxisomal β-oxidation system while CYP4A1 is involved in microsomal ω-oxidation of fatty acids. GAPDH is used as an indicator of RNA loading. (j) Western blot analysis from the above-mentioned livers was used to verify the degree of expression of peroxisomal and mitochondrial fatty acid metabolizing enzymes in wild-type and SRC knockout mice. Liver homogenates (20 μg) from each group of mice were run on 4–20% SDS PAGE gel and immunoblotted using antibodies for peroxisomal (ACOX1, L-PBE, PTL, D-PBE, and SCPx) and mitochondrial (SCAD, MCAD, and VLCAD) fatty acid metabolizing enzymes. No difference in the induction was observed between SRC nulls and wild-type for the β-oxidation enzymes.
Figure 3Effects of Med1 and PRIP deletion on PPARα ligand-induced pleiotropic responses in liver. Med1ΔLiv mice treated with Wy-14,643 (0.125% wt/wt) for 2 weeks (a, b) show an occasional hepatocyte that escaped Alb-Cre mediated deletion of Med1 floxed alleles. These Med1 positive hepatocytes respond to the peroxisome proliferative effects of PPARα-ligand (arrows indicate to Med1+/+ cells with numerous peroxisomes) but not the majority of Med1−/− hepatocytes. Chronic treatment of Med1ΔLiv mice with 0.02% Wy-14,643 for 5 months (c–e) results in clonal expansion of residual Med1fl/fl cells as demonstrated by H&E staining (c). In contrast, the adjacent hepatocyte lacking Med1 are generally smaller than normal hepatocytes (see boxed area in c). Immunohistochemical localization of Med1 reveals that expanding colonies of large hepatocytes are Med1 positive (nuclear Med1 in panel d). These cells also show abundant cytoplasmic expression of L-PBE, the second enzyme of the peroxisomal fatty acid β-oxidation system (panel e), whereas the smaller Med1 null hepatocytes (boxed areas) fail to show L-PBE induction (panel e). Disruption of coactivator PRIP in hepatocytes does not interfere with PPARα ligand-induced peroxisome proliferation as evidenced by the abundant catalase positive peroxisomes (brown dots) in all hepatocytes (panel f). Compare this panel (f) with panel (b) in which only an occasional Med1+/+ cell responds to PPARα ligand.