Literature DB >> 8940029

Induction properties of a transiently transfected glucocorticoid-responsive gene vary with glucocorticoid receptor concentration.

D Szapary1, M Xu, S S Simons.   

Abstract

Transient transfections of steroid receptors have yielded much of the data used to construct the current models of steroid hormone action. These experiments invariably examine the ability of receptors to regulate transcription when occupied by saturating concentrations of steroid. We now report that other induction properties of a transiently transfected gene are not constant but vary with the concentration of transiently transfected glucocorticoid receptors. Thus, the percentage of maximal induction seen with subsaturating concentrations of glucocorticoid could be dramatically increased, and an antiglucocorticoid could be converted into a partial glucocorticoid, simply by increasing the concentration of glucocorticoid receptors. This behavior was observed in HeLa cells, containing endogenous receptors, or in CV-1 cells, containing almost no endogenous receptor, with either homologous or heterologous receptors. These increases were relatively insensitive to the concentration of reporter gene, suggesting the titration of some transcription factor(s) involved in regulating the position of the glucocorticoid dose-response curve and the agonist activity of an antiglucocorticoid. This property of transfected glucocorticoid receptors required a full-length, functionally active receptor but was retained, albeit reduced in magnitude, in the absence of binding to a glucocorticoid response element. Furthermore, this phenomenon was specific in that the A form of the human progesterone receptor had no effect under the same conditions. These variations in induction properties of antiglucocorticoids and of subsaturating concentrations of glucocorticoid, in a manner that was proportional to the amount of transfected receptor, reveal processes that are not operative with saturating concentrations of glucocorticoid. These variations also demonstrate that caution should be exercised in making mechanistic conclusions based solely on experiments conducted with saturating concentrations of glucocorticoid.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8940029     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.271.48.30576

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


  20 in total

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7.  The hypersensitive glucocorticoid response specifically regulates period 1 and expression of circadian genes.

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8.  Identification of location and kinetically defined mechanism of cofactors and reporter genes in the cascade of steroid-regulated transactivation.

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9.  Modulation of transcription parameters in glucocorticoid receptor-mediated repression.

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