Literature DB >> 27650495

Mineralocorticoid Receptor (MR) trans-Activation of Inflammatory AP-1 Signaling: DEPENDENCE ON DNA SEQUENCE, MR CONFORMATION, AND AP-1 FAMILY MEMBER EXPRESSION.

Edward J Dougherty1, Jason M Elinoff2, Gabriela A Ferreyra2, Angela Hou2, Rongman Cai2, Junfeng Sun2, Kevin P Blaine2, Shuibang Wang2, Robert L Danner3.   

Abstract

Glucocorticoids are commonly used to treat inflammatory disorders. The glucocorticoid receptor (GR) can tether to inflammatory transcription factor complexes, such as NFκB and AP-1, and trans-repress the transcription of cytokines, chemokines, and adhesion molecules. In contrast, aldosterone and the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) primarily promote cardiovascular inflammation by incompletely understood mechanisms. Although MR has been shown to weakly repress NFκB, its role in modulating AP-1 has not been established. Here, the effects of GR and MR on NFκB and AP-1 signaling were directly compared using a variety of ligands, two different AP-1 consensus sequences, GR and MR DNA-binding domain mutants, and siRNA knockdown or overexpression of core AP-1 family members. Both GR and MR repressed an NFκB reporter without influencing p65 or p50 binding to DNA. Likewise, neither GR nor MR affected AP-1 binding, but repression or activation of AP-1 reporters occurred in a ligand-, AP-1 consensus sequence-, and AP-1 family member-specific manner. Notably, aldosterone interactions with both GR and MR demonstrated a potential to activate AP-1. DNA-binding domain mutations that eliminated the ability of GR and MR to cis-activate a hormone response element-driven reporter variably affected the strength and polarity of these responses. Importantly, MR modulation of NFκB and AP-1 signaling was consistent with a trans-mechanism, and AP-1 effects were confirmed for specific gene targets in primary human cells. Steroid nuclear receptor trans-effects on inflammatory signaling are context-dependent and influenced by nuclear receptor conformation, DNA sequence, and the expression of heterologous binding partners. Aldosterone activation of AP-1 may contribute to its proinflammatory effects in the vasculature.
© 2016 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  AP1 transcription factor (AP-1); NF-κB transcription factor; glucocorticoid receptor; inflammation; mineralocorticoid receptor; nuclear receptor; trans-repression

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27650495      PMCID: PMC5095416          DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M116.732248

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  76 in total

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Review 2.  Aldosterone and vascular inflammation.

Authors:  Nancy J Brown
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2008-01-02       Impact factor: 10.190

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Authors:  K De Bosscher; M L Schmitz; W Vanden Berghe; S Plaisance; W Fiers; G Haegeman
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7.  Identification of endogenous glucocorticoid repressed genes differentially regulated by a glucocorticoid receptor mutant able to separate between nuclear factor-kappaB and activator protein-1 repression.

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Authors:  R I Scheinman; A Gualberto; C M Jewell; J A Cidlowski; A S Baldwin
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5.  Genetic Profiling of Glucocorticoid (NR3C1) and Mineralocorticoid (NR3C2) Receptor Polymorphisms before Starting Therapy with Androgen Receptor Inhibitors: A Study of a Patient Who Developed Toxic Myocarditis after Enzalutamide Treatment.

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6.  Maternal high-fat diet induces sex-specific changes to glucocorticoid and inflammatory signaling in response to corticosterone and lipopolysaccharide challenge in adult rat offspring.

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7.  P38 MAPK and glucocorticoid receptor crosstalk in bronchial epithelial cells.

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