| Literature DB >> 25816223 |
Carson C Chow1, Kelsey K Finn2, Geoffery B Storchan2, Xinping Lu2, Xiaoyan Sheng2, S Stoney Simons2.
Abstract
Gene repression by transcription factors, and glucocorticoid receptors (GR) in particular, is a critical, but poorly understood, physiological response. Among the many unresolved questions is the difference between GR regulated induction and repression, and whether transcription cofactor action is the same in both. Because activity classifications based on changes in gene product level are mechanistically uninformative, we present a theory for gene repression in which the mechanisms of factor action are defined kinetically and are consistent for both gene repression and induction. The theory is generally applicable and amenable to predictions if the dose-response curve for gene repression is non-cooperative with a unit Hill coefficient, which is observed for GR-regulated repression of AP1LUC reporter induction by phorbol myristate acetate. The theory predicts the mechanism of GR and cofactors, and where they act with respect to each other, based on how each cofactor alters the plots of various kinetic parameters vs. cofactor. We show that the kinetically-defined mechanism of action of each of four factors (reporter gene, p160 coactivator TIF2, and two pharmaceuticals [NU6027 and phenanthroline]) is the same in GR-regulated repression and induction. What differs is the position of GR action. This insight should simplify clinical efforts to differentially modulate factor actions in gene induction vs. gene repression.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25816223 PMCID: PMC4376387 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Comput Biol ISSN: 1553-734X Impact factor: 4.475
Fig 1Reaction diagram for a single step in the gene induction sequence.
The product from the previous step Y combines with the accelerator X to form a new product with equilibrium or affinity constant q . A decelerator D inhibits the reaction by binding to X to form with affinity constant and/or by binding to to form . The two products and enter the following reaction in the combination . The decelerator is called competitive when α = 0, uncompetitive when γ = 0, noncompetitive when α = γ, linear when β = 0, and partial when β>0.
Fig 2Dose-response curve for GR repression (for eight doses of Dex) is linear-fractional plot.
U2OS.rGR cells were transiently transfected with 35ng of AP1LUC plasmid and (A) 0ng or (B) 10ng of TIF2 plasmid and then treated with 15ng/ml of PMA and the indicated concentrations of Dex. Luciferase activity was determined and the data plotted and fit to Equation (1) as described in Materials and Methods (error bars are ± S.D. of triplicates).
Predicted mechanism based on dose-response parameter plots.
| Entry | Plot properties of Parameter vs F | Predictions |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Amax constant | 1. F is any activity after or at GR and GR is A after CLS |
| 2 | Amax linear increasing through the origin | 1. F is A at CLS |
| 3 | Amax nonlinear increasing through the origin | 1. F is A before CLS |
| 4 | Amax decreasing, approaches zero for infinite F(1/Amax is linear increasing) | 1. F is C or L before or at the CLS and GR is A after CLS |
| 5 | Amax and Amin nonlinear increasing positive at true zero of F | 1. F is A after CLS and GR is A after F or GR is D |
| 6 | Amax nonlinear decreasing does not approach zero for infinite F | 1. F is A after CLS and GR is A after F or GR is D |
| 7 | Amax increasing and Amin decreasing | 1. F is A after CLS andGR is A or C, after F |
| 8 | Amin linear increasing through the origin | 1. F is A at the CLS |
| 9 | Amin nonlinear increasing through the origin | 1. F is A before CLS |
| 10 | Amin positive at true zero of F | 1. F is A after CLS |
| 11 | Amin decreasing, approaches zero for infinite F(1/Amin linear increasing) | 1. F is C, LU, or LN, before or at CLS |
| 12 | H of Amin < H of Amax | 1. F is A after CLS and GR is A after F |
| 13 | H of Amin > H of Amax | 1. F is A before CLS and GR is C or L, at F |
| 14 | H of 1/Amin < H of 1/Amax | 1. F is A after CLS and GR is A after F |
| 15 | H of 1/Amin > H of 1/Amax | 1. F is C after CLS and GR is A at F |
| 16 | H of 1/Amin = H of 1/Amax | 1. F is A after CLS and GR is D before or at CLS |
| 17 | IC50 constant | 1. F is A at the CLS |
| 18 | IC50 increases | 1. F is L before or at CLS and GR is A after CLS |
| 19 | IC50 decreases | 1. F is A before or after CLS and GR is A after CLS |
| 20 | Amax*IC50/Amin constant | 1. Either F or GR acts before or at the CLS |
| 21 | Amax*IC50/Amin increases | 1. F is C after CLS andGR is A after CLS |
| 22 | Amax*IC50/Amin decreases | 1. F is A after CLS and GR is A after CLS |
The predictions are derived by examining the formulas for these parameters as shown in S2 Table. F means Factor, GR means steroid-receptor complex, A means accelerator, D means any type of decelerator, C means competitive decelerator, U means uncompetetive decelerator, N means noncompetitive decelerator, L means linear decelerator, and P means partial decelerator. H is the concentration for the half-maximum of the dose-response parameter. This table represents sufficient conditions and is not complete. Note that two cofactors cannot be of the same type at the same step, GR will not repress gene expression if it is an A before the CLS, and the Amin graphs allow GR to act anywhere as a D or as an A after the CLS.
Fig 3Plots of dose-response parameters for varying concentrations of AP1LUC and TIF2.
Experiments were conducted with triplicate samples of U2OS.rGR cells that were transiently transfected with the indicated concentrations of AP1LUC and TIF2 plasmids and treated with 25ng/ml of PMA for four concentrations of Dex. Average plots vs. TIF2 for (A) Amax, (B) Amin, (C) IC50, and (D) Amax×IC50/Amin and vs. AP1LUC for (E) Amax and (F) IC50 were obtained by first normalizing the data to the value for the lowest amount of AP1LUC and factor and then averaging and plotting the values (n = 4–12, ± S.E.M.).
Fig 5Dose-response parameters for varying concentrations of AP1LUC and phenanthroline.
Experimental assays were conducted as in Fig. 4. Average plots of (A) Amax, (B) Amin, (C) Amax×IC50/Amin, and (D) IC50 vs. NU6027 were obtained by first normalizing the data to the value for the lowest amount of AP1LUC and factor and then averaging and plotting the values (n = 5, ± S.E.M.).
Fig 4Dose-response parameters for varying concentrations of AP1LUC and NU6027.
Experimental assays were conducted as in Fig. 3 with 10ng/ml of PMA and four concentrations of Dex. Average plots of (A) Amax, (B) Amin, (C) Amax×IC50/Amin, and (D) IC50 vs. NU6027 were obtained by first normalizing the data to the value for the lowest amount of AP1LUC and factor and then averaging and plotting the values (n = 5, ± S.E.M.).
Fig 6Predicted reaction scheme of PMA induction of Luciferase activity from synthetic reporter (AP1LUC) by AP1 that is repressed by steroid-bound receptor (GR).
The position of the CLS, and positions of action of TIF2, NU6027, phenanthroline, and GR, as determined by the data of Figs. 3–5, are indicated. A’ and A” represent unknown, post-CLS steps, each of which can lead to Luciferase activity but the efficiency from A” is much less than A’.