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Molecular and Cellular Biology, January 2000, p. 187-195, Vol. 20, No. 1
0270-7306/0/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The Orphan Nuclear Receptor SHP Inhibits Hepatocyte Nuclear
Factor 4 and Retinoid X Receptor Transactivation: Two Mechanisms
for Repression
Yoon-Kwang
Lee,1
Helen
Dell,2
Dennis H.
Dowhan,1
Margarita
Hadzopoulou-Cladaras,2 and
David D.
Moore1,*
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology,
Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas
77030,1 and Department of Medicine, Section
of Molecular Genetics, Cardiovascular Institute, Boston University
School of Medicine, Center for Advanced Biomedical Research, Boston,
Massachusetts 021182
Received 26 July 1999/Returned for modification 25 August
1999/Accepted 27 September 1999
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ABSTRACT |
The orphan nuclear hormone receptor SHP interacts with a number of
other nuclear hormone receptors and inhibits their transcriptional activity. Several mechanisms have been suggested to account for this
inhibition. Here we show that SHP inhibits transactivation by the
orphan receptor hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 (HNF-4) and the retinoid X
receptor (RXR) by at least two mechanisms. SHP interacts with the same
HNF-4 surface recognized by transcriptional coactivators and competes
with them for binding in vivo. The minimal SHP sequences previously
found to be required for interaction with other receptors are
sufficient for interaction with HNF-4, although deletion results
indicate that additional C-terminal sequences are necessary for full
binding and coactivator competition. These additional sequences include
those associated with direct transcriptional repressor activity of SHP.
SHP also competes with coactivators for binding to ligand-activated
RXR, and based on the ligand-dependent interaction with other nuclear
receptors, it is likely that coactivator competition is a general
feature of SHP-mediated repression. The minimal receptor interaction
domain of SHP is sufficient for full interaction with RXR, as
previously described. This domain is also sufficient for full
coactivator competition. Functionally, however, full inhibition of RXR
transactivation requires the presence of the C-terminal repressor
domain, with only weak inhibition associated with this receptor
interaction domain. Overall, these results suggest that SHP represses
nuclear hormone receptor-mediated transactivation via two separate
steps: first by competition with coactivators and then by direct
effects of its transcriptional repressor function.
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INTRODUCTION |
Nuclear hormone receptors are
transcription factors whose activities are regulated by direct binding
of small lipophilic molecules such as steroids, thyroid hormone,
retinoids, and vitamin D3 (24). These receptors
have been studied extensively due to their important roles in the
control of development and cellular homeostasis. The nuclear hormone
receptor superfamily also includes numerous orphan receptors, which do
not have identified ligands (10, 23). The structural
similarities shared by superfamily members reside in two distinct
functional domains. The first and most highly conserved is the DNA
binding domain, also called the C domain, which targets receptors to
specific DNA sequences known as hormone response elements. The second
is the ligand binding domain (LBD), which is also called the E domain.
It is located in the C-terminal region and is involved in several
functions in addition to ligand binding, including dimerization and
ligand-dependent transcriptional activation.
Crystallographic studies (e.g., references 30, 43,
and 46) have revealed that ligand binding provokes a
conformational change in the receptors that allows them to bind a
diverse group of proteins termed coactivators (reviewed in references
14, 37, and 47). These
coactivators bind to a common surface of the receptors formed by
several alpha-helices (8, 27, 36), and it is thought that
the appropriate positioning of the C-terminal helix 12 in response to
ligand binding is of particular importance in promoting coactivator
interaction. The ligand-dependent transcriptional activation function
is referred to as AF-2, and a conserved sequence within helix 12 (7) that is required for coactivator binding is referred to
as the AF-2 motif.
One important group of related coactivators is encoded by three genes,
each of which has multiple names (37, 47). The first
described was SRC-1 (27), which was followed by SRC-2, which
is also known as TIF2 (39) or GRIP-1 (12), and by
SRC-3, which is also known as ACTR (5), AIB1 (1),
p/CIP (38), RAC3 (20), and TRAM-1
(40). These proteins, which are all approximately 160 kDa,
show strong ligand-dependent interaction with the AF-2 surface of the
receptors and are able to stimulate receptor transactivation when
overexpressed. Another group of two related proteins, CBP and p300,
also stimulate ligand-dependent transactivation by the receptors (e.g.,
reference 18). These two proteins, which can
interact with members of the p160/SRC family, also function as
coactivators for many other transcription factors (47).
Finally, there are a number of other potentially important coactivators
that also stimulate nuclear hormone-mediated transactivation and show
either AF-2-dependent (e.g., reference 26) or
AF-2-independent (e.g., reference 5) interaction
with receptors.
At least two general mechanisms are thought to account for the effects
of the coactivators. Several lines of evidence indicate that they can
counteract inhibitory chromatin effects. At least for SRC-1
(39), ACTR/SRC-3 (6), p300/CBP (3,
28), and p/CAF (49), this is thought to be a
consequence of their intrinsic histone acetyltransferase activity. It
is also thought that these coactivators may function more directly to
recruit RNA polymerase to promoters by interactions with components of
the basal transcriptional apparatus (4).
Among the numerous proteins initially identified on the basis of
interaction with receptor LBDs is an unusual orphan nuclear receptor,
SHP. This orphan was originally isolated on the basis of its
interaction with the new receptor CAR, using the Saccharomyces cerevisiae two-hybrid assay (32). Initial studies
demonstrated that SHP lacks a DNA binding domain and that it exhibits
functional interactions with several other nuclear hormone receptors in
addition to CAR (32). In general, SHP acts to decrease
transactivation by its partners in transient-transfection assays. This
inhibitory effect was first attributed to an inhibition of DNA binding
of the SHP targets. However, further studies revealed that SHP itself carries a novel autonomous repression domain in its C-terminal region
(33). The existence of this domain suggested that SHP could
also act to inhibit transcription if it could interact with DNA-bound
receptor targets. Support for this alternative possibility was recently
provided by results demonstrating that SHP is an effective inhibitor of
estrogen receptor (ER) transactivation, even though it does not block
binding of ER to estrogen response elements (34).
The inhibitory effect of SHP on ER raises two important questions.
Because ER is in the group of receptors thought to function exclusively
as homodimers, the first question is whether the range of SHP targets
could include other superfamily members in this group. Of these
superfamily members, the orphan HNF-4 is particularly interesting,
since loss of function of a single HNF-4 allele causes the syndrome of
mature-onset diabetes of the young (48). HNF-4 is expressed
in liver and in the insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells, and the
potential importance of any functional interaction between SHP and
HNF-4 was recently extended by preliminary results indicating that SHP
is expressed not only in liver, as previously described
(32), but also in beta cells. The second question concerns
the mechanism of the inhibitory effects of SHP on DNA-bound targets. In
addition to the inherent SHP repressor function, a recent report has
suggested yet another mechanism for repression, in which SHP interferes
with coactivator binding to ER (17). The relative
contributions of the direct repressor activity and the indirect
interference with coactivator function to SHP-mediated inhibition of ER
and other targets remain unclear.
We have examined both the potential interaction of SHP with HNF-4 and
the molecular basis for its inhibitory effects. As with other
superfamily members, SHP is an effective inhibitor of HNF-4 transactivation. SHP requires the conserved AF-2 motif for interaction with HNF-4 and also with retinoid X receptor (RXR) and can compete with
coactivators for binding to both. At least in the case of RXR
inhibition, loss of the SHP repressor function strongly weakens but
does not completely block SHP-mediated repression. This supports the
functional importance of this domain and suggests a two-step model for
SHP inhibition. In this model, an initial inhibitory effect results
from the loss of coactivator binding due to competition by SHP. Full
inhibition depends on the second step, in which the SHP repressor
domain acts directly to further decrease expression.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plasmids.
All of the HNF-4-related constructs, including
mammalian expression vectors for wild-type HNF-4 and mutants, Gal4-HNF4
chimeras, and the reporter construct (BA1)5CAT were
described previously (12). VP16-HNF4 was constructed by
insertion of a PCR-amplified fragment containing the LBD of HNF-4 into
the previously described mammalian VP16 fusion vector (11).
Gal4 fusions of full-length and deletion mutants of murine SHP,
CDM8SHP, and the Gal4Tkluc reporter construct were also described
elsewhere (33). pCMX-SRC3 was a kind gift from J. D. Chen (University of Massachusetts, Worcester). Gal4SRC-3(RID) was
constructed by insertion of PCR-amplified receptor
interaction domain of SRC-3 (amino acids 601 to 761) into
pCMXVP16. VP16RXR
19C was generated by insertion of human RXR
sequence from CDMhRXR
19C (51) into the previously
described pCMXVP16 vector (11). For in vitro translation,
HNF-4 inserts were reintroduced into pCMXGal4 plasmid. pT7lac-hRXR
and CDMhRXR
19C have been described previously (51).
Transient-transfection assays.
Plasmids were transfected
into 50 to 60% confluent HepG2 cells by the calcium phosphate DNA
coprecipitation method, as described previously (9, 20). For
luciferase assays, cells were maintained in 24-well plates. For
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) assays, cell were maintained in
30-mm-diameter dishes. CAT, luciferase, and growth hormone (GH)
activities were assayed approximately 48 h after addition of
calcium phosphate DNA precipitates. For ligand treatment, cells were
transfected in medium containing 10% charcoal-stripped fetal bovine
serum and treated with the ligands for approximately 30 h.
9-cis-retinoic acid (9-cis-RA) was purchased from
Biomol (Plymouth Meeting, Pa.) and LG1069 was from Glaxo Wellcome
(Research Park Triangle, N.C.). For CAT assays, cells were collected in
TEN solution (0.04 M Tris-HCl [pH 7.4], 1 mM EDTA, 0.15 M NaCl), and
whole-cell extracts were prepared in 0.25 M Tris-HCl, pH 7.8, by three
sequential freeze-thaw cycles. CAT activities were determined by using
[14C]chloramphenicol and acetyl coenzyme A as previously
described. Nonacetylated and acetylated chloramphenicol forms were
separated on IB2 silica gel plates by using chloroform-methanol (95:5)
for development, and radioactive spots, detected by autoradiography, were cut from the thin-layer plates and counted. CAT enzyme levels that
exhibited more than 60% conversion of acetylated product were diluted
and reassayed for CAT activity in the linear range.
In vitro binding assays.
In vitro binding assays were
performed with glutathione S-transferase (GST) and GST
fusion proteins expressed in Escherichia coli and bound to
glutathione agarose, and appropriate
[35S]methionine-labeled target proteins were produced by
in vitro translation. Incubation and removal of nonspecifically bound
proteins were performed by standard methods (2).
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RESULTS |
SHP represses HNF-4-mediated transactivation.
Based on both
the association of SHP with a variety of nuclear hormone receptors and
the expression of SHP in liver, we tested the capability of SHP to
interact with the liver enriched orphan receptor HNF-4 (38)
in the yeast two-hybrid system. In this assay, strong association was
observed between a LexA-SHP fusion and a B42-HNF4 fusion (W. Seol,
unpublished observation). In order to further test the effect of SHP on
HNF-4-mediated transactivation, a reporter (12)
containing a homopolymer of five HNF-4 binding sites from the
apolipoprotein B promoter attached to a CAT reporter [(BA1)5CAT] was cotransfected into HepG2 cells with SHP
and HNF-4 expression vectors. As shown in Fig.
1A, SHP inhibited HNF-4 transactivation in a dose-dependent manner. This functional interaction confirms the
yeast results and indicates that HNF-4, like many other nuclear receptors, is an inhibitory target of SHP (17, 32-34).

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FIG. 1.
Repression of HNF-4-mediated transactivation by SHP. (A)
Repression of direct HNF-4 transactivation. HepG2 cells were
cotransfected with 3 µg of (BA1)5CAT, 50 ng of HNF-4,
0.75 µg of CMV -Gal, and 50 ng to 1 µg of SHP plasmid. At 40 h posttransfection, the cells were harvested for CAT and
-galactosidase assay. The CAT values are the means of normalized
three independent transfection experiments, each carried out in
duplicate. (B) Repression of Gal4-HNF4 transactivation. HepG2 cells
were cotransfected with 25 ng of Gal4-HNF4D2CD1 (Fig. 3A), 200 ng of
TKGH, 200 ng of Gal4Tkluc reporter plasmid, and increasing amounts of
SHP expression vector. CDM8 was used to maintain a constant amount of
receptor expression vector, and total DNA was transfected. Cell
extracts were prepared 48 h following transfection. Luciferase
activities normalized with GH values are plotted as the mean ± standard deviation (n = 3).
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Previous results have suggested that SHP inhibition may be a reflection
of inhibition of DNA binding (32). However, in agreement with previous results with ER (34), no inhibitory effect of SHP on HNF-4 DNA binding was observed (data not shown). This result was
not unexpected, since SHP targets the putative LBD of HNF-4 in yeast,
and this domain is not essential for specific DNA binding by HNF-4
(16). To determine whether SHP could inhibit transactivation by an HNF-4 LBD tethered to DNA by a heterologous DNA binding domain,
the effect of SHP on an appropriate Gal4-HNF4 fusion was determined. As
previously described (12), this Gal4-HNF4 fusion is an
apparently constitutive transactivator of a reporter containing Gal4
DNA binding sites. This constitutive activity was specifically inhibited by SHP in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 1B), indicating that
SHP can directly inhibit transactivation directed by the putative LBD
of HNF-4. A direct role for the SHP repression function in this
inhibition is suggested by the observation that, at the highest levels
of SHP, expression was reduced below the basal level observed with Gal4 alone.
SHP interacts with the AF-2 domain of HNF-4 in mammalian
cells.
The association of SHP and HNF-4 previously indicated by
yeast two-hybrid results was confirmed by a two-hybrid approach in mammalian cells, using either a Gal4-SHP fusion and a fusion of the
VP16 transactivation domain to HNF-4 or the reciprocal combination. As
indicated in Fig. 2B, coexpression of
Gal4-SHP with the VP16-HNF4 fusion strongly stimulated reporter gene
expression from the repressed state observed with Gal4-SHP alone.
Coexpression of VP16-SHP also increased reporter gene expression beyond
that observed with Gal4-HNF4 alone (Fig. 3B). To localize the SHP
sequences required for HNF-4 association, a previously described series
of SHP deletion mutants fused to Gal4 DNA binding domain
(33) (Fig. 2A) were cotransfected into HepG2 cells with
VP16-HNF4. As observed with other SHP targets, the constructs
containing the SHP receptor association domain (W160X,
N-148) showed
a significant stimulation of luciferase activity when coexpressed with
VP16-HNF4, indicating that this region is also sufficient for HNF-4
interaction (Fig. 2B). Importantly, and in strong contrast to previous
results with RXR (33), the loss of the SHP repression
function in the W160X fusion did not result in a significant increase
in apparent interaction. Previous results have demonstrated that the
loss of such repressor function potently increases reporter gene
expression in this system (33, 35). Thus, the lack of such
an increase indicates that the truncated W160X product interacts more
weakly with HNF-4 than the full-length SHP does. This is consistent
with results with RAR, ER, and other receptor superfamily members
(33, 34).


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FIG. 2.
HNF-4 interacts with the receptor interaction domain of
SHP. (A) Previously described SHP mutants (33) are
diagrammed, fused to Gal4. INT and REP represent receptor interaction
and direct repression domains, respectively. (B) SHP sequences required
for SHP interaction in the mammalian two-hybrid assay. Fifty nanograms
of each of the deletion versions of murine SHP fused to the Gal4 DNA
binding domain was cotransfected into HepG2 cells with 50 ng of a
vector expressing VP16 alone or VP16-HNF4D2. Normalized luciferase
expression directed by the Gal4Tkluc reporter is indicated as the
mean ± standard deviation (n = 3). WT, wild
type.
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To identify HNF-4 sequences required for SHP interaction in mammalian
cells, a series of HNF-4 mutants fused to Gal4 (12) (Fig.
3A) was coexpressed with a VP16-SHP
fusion in HepG2 cells. Interestingly, a deletion of 6 amino acids
removing the conserved AF-2 motif (Gal4-D2CD1b) essentially abolished
association with SHP, while an analogous construct with an intact AF-2
motif (Gal4-D2CD1) showed a significant association (Fig. 3B).
Moreover, mutation of the conserved glutamic acid (Glu363)
at the core of the AF-2 motif (Gal4-E363K) also blocked interaction with SHP. In contrast, mutation of a leucine residue
(Leu366) located just outside of the conserved AF-2 motif
(Gal4-L366E) did not impair SHP association. These mammalian two-hybrid
results were confirmed and extended by biochemical results
demonstrating specific binding of 35S-labeled HNF4D2CD1 to
a GST-SHP fusion (Fig. 3C). As expected, binding was lost with the two
HNF4 mutants affecting the AF-2 motif but retained with the L366E
mutant.



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FIG. 3.
SHP interacts with the AF-2 surface of HNF-4. (A)
Gal4-HNF4 constructs used in mammalian two-hybrid mapping are
diagrammed. (B) HNF-4 sequences required for SHP interaction in the
mammalian two-hybrid assay. Gal4 fusions (50 ng each) to the deletion
or point mutant versions of HNF-4 were cotransfected with 50 ng of VP16
or VP16-SHP into HepG2 cells. Normalized luciferase expression from the
Gal4Tkluc reporter is shown. (C) The AF-2 surface of HNF-4 is required
for interaction with SHP in vitro. GST alone or a GST-SHP fusion
protein were expressed in E. coli, bound to glutathione
agarose, and incubated with the indicated Gal4-HNF4 fusion proteins,
which were 35S labeled by in vitro translation.
Specifically bound proteins were eluted by standard procedures
(2) and are compared to 20% of the total input (bottom
gel). WT, wild type.
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Overall, these results demonstrate that SHP requires the HNF-4 AF-2
motif for interaction with HNF-4. This is in good agreement with
recent, independently derived results indicating that SHP targets the
AF-2 surface of ER (17).
SHP competes with the coactivator SRC-3 for binding to HNF-4.
Two members of the p160 family, SRC-1 and SRC-2 (also known as TIF2 and
GRIP-1) have been identified as coactivators for HNF-4 (44).
The third member of this family, SRC-3 (also known as ACTR, AIB1,
p/CIP, TRAM-1, and RAC3) was also tested for stimulation of HNF-4
transactivation. An SRC-3 expression vector was introduced into HepG2
cells along with an HNF-4 vector and the (BA1)5CAT reporter. As expected, SRC-3 coexpression further stimulated HNF-4 transactivation in a dose-dependent manner (data not shown). To confirm
that the conserved AF-2 motif of HNF-4 is required for this SRC-3
stimulation, various deletion and point mutants of HNF-4 fused to Gal4
were cotransfected into HepG2 cells with the SRC-3 expression vector
(Fig. 4). Gal4-HFN4 D2CD1, which contains an intact AF-2 motif, showed stimulation, but Gal4-HFN4 D2CD1b, which
is missing this motif, did not. Mutation of the conserved glutamic acid
in the AF-2 motif (E363K) decreased transactivation but, as previously
observed with an analogous RXR mutant (42), did not prevent
SRC-3 stimulation. Thus, these results indicate that the HNF-4 AF-2
motif is required for functional effects of SRC-3.

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FIG. 4.
Stimulation of Gal4-HNF4 transactivation by SRC-3.
Deletion or point mutant versions of HNF-4 (Fig. 3) fused to the Gal4
DNA binding domain (25 ng) were cotransfected into HepG2 cells with 500 ng of SRC-3. At 48 h after transfection, cells were harvested for
luciferase and GH assays. Normalized luciferase expression directed by
the Gal4Tkluc reporter is indicated as the mean ± standard
deviation (n = 3). WT, wild type.
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Together, the results with SHP and SRC-3 suggest that these two
proteins should compete for the binding to the AF-2 surface of HNF-4.
To test this, the effect of SHP on the interaction of SRC-3 and HNF-4
was examined in mammalian cells by a two-hybrid competition assay. A
Gal4 fusion of the receptor-interacting domain of SRC-3 (amino acids
601 to 761) was generated and transfected into HepG2 cells with a
VP16-HNF4 fusion. As expected, coexpression of these fusions resulted
in increased luciferase expression, reflecting an effective
SRC-3-HNF-4 interaction. As potential competitors, increasing amounts
of either VP16-SHP or VP16-SHPW160X were
added. (The VP16 activation domain was
added to alleviate concerns related to secondary effects of recruiting
an inhibitory SHP protein to an HNF-4-coactivator complex and to allow
detection of potential interaction of SHP with SRC-3. However, similar
results were observed with SHP and SHP W160X alone.) As indicated in
Fig. 5, both competitors decreased the interaction of SRC-3 with HNF-4. Consistent with the apparently decreased affinity of the truncated mutant for HNF-4 as noted above, VP16-SHPW160X was an approximately 10-fold-weaker competitor than VP16-SHP. Since neither competitor showed any apparent interaction with Gal4-SRC3 and the total amount of
VP16 expression vector was kept constant, we conclude that this
decreased expression in this mammalian two-hybrid system is a result of
competition between SRC-3 and SHP for binding to the AF-2 surface of
HNF-4.

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FIG. 5.
SHP competes specifically with SRC-3 for binding to
HNF-4 in a mammalian two-hybrid assay. HepG2 cells were cotransfected
with 50 ng (each) of Gal4SRC-3(RID), VP16 or VP16-HNF4, and the
indicated amounts of VP16-SHP and VP16-SHPW160X. Normalized luciferase
expression directed by the Gal4Tkluc reporter is indicated as the
mean ± standard deviation (n = 3). The decreased
luciferase expression in the presence of increasing amounts of the SHP
proteins reflects decreased interaction between SRC-3 and HNF-4.
Essentially identical results were observed with intact SHP.
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SHP competes with coactivators to bind RXR.
The ability of SHP
to compete for coactivator binding to HNF-4 and the suggestion of a
similar mechanism for ER (17) raise the question of the
generality of this mechanism and also of its relationship to previously
proposed direct activity of SHP as a transcriptional repressor. These
issues were addressed by using RXR, which was previously shown to have
a strong interaction with SHP (33). As with HNF-4, the
potential involvement of the RXR AF-2 motif in the interaction with SHP
was examined by the mammalian two-hybrid assay (Fig.
6A). Derivatives of the LBD of wild-type RXR and a mutant lacking the C-terminal AF-2 motif but capable of
ligand binding (21, 52) were constructed and tested for interaction with GAL-SHP. As previously described, the full-length RXR
exhibited a strong, ligand-dependent interaction with full-length SHP.
However, SHP failed to bind the RXR lacking the AF-2 motif, indicating
that SHP also targets the activation surface of RXR. This was confirmed
by biochemical results demonstrating ligand-dependent interaction of
35S-labeled wild-type RXR, but not the RXR AF-2 mutant,
with GST-SHP (Fig. 6B).


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FIG. 6.
SHP interacts with the AF-2 surface of RXR. (A)
Mammalian two-hybrid assay for interaction. Gal4SHP was transfected
into HepG2 cells along with VP16RXR, VP16RXR 19C, or VP16 alone.
Approximately 20 h after transfection, the cells were treated with
1 µM 9-cis-RA for 30 h. Normalized luciferase
expression directed by the Gal4Tkluc reporter is indicated as the
mean ± standard deviation (n = 3). (B) The AF-2
surface of RXR is required for interaction with SHP in vitro. GST alone
or a GST-SHP fusion protein were expressed in E. coli, bound
to glutathione agarose, and incubated with wild-type RXR or the
C-terminal 19 deletion mutant, both of which were 35S
labeled by in vitro translation. Specifically bound proteins were
eluted by standard procedures (2) and are compared to 20%
of the total input (bottom gel).
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Since SRC-3 binds the same surface of RXR (6), the mammalian
two-hybrid competition assay was used to determine whether SHP also
competes with coactivators for binding to RXR in the presence of either
9-cis-RA or the synthetic RXR agonist LG1069. Increasing
concentrations of SHP efficiently competed with SRC-3 for RXR binding
(Fig. 7). In contrast to the results with
HNF-4, however, the ability of the SHPW160X to compete was
indistinguishable from that of full-length SHP. This is consistent with
previous results demonstrating that the ability of this truncated SHP
to interact with RXR is equivalent to that of wild-type SHP
(33).

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FIG. 7.
SHP competes specifically with SRC-3 for binding to
activated RXR in a mammalian two-hybrid assay. HepG2 cells were
cotransfected with 50 ng (each) of Gal4-SRC3, VP16 or a VP16 fusion to
the RXR LBD [VP16-RXR(L)], and the indicated amounts of plasmids
expressing VP16-SHP and VP16-SHPW160X. 9-cis-RA (1 µM) was
added 20 h after transfection, and cells were further incubated
for 30 h before harvest. Normalized luciferase expression is
plotted as the mean ± standard deviation from three independent
experiments. Essentially identical results were obtained in treatments
with the specific RXR agonist LG1069. WT, wild type.
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Two-step repression by SHP.
The efficient RXR interaction of
this mutant, which lacks the direct repression activity of SHP, allowed
a direct test of the relative importance of this activity and
coactivator competition in RXR inhibition. As indicated in Fig.
8A, wild-type SHP efficiently repressed
9-cis-RA-dependent transactivation by Gal4-RXR, even at
relatively low ratios of Gal4 and SHP expression vectors. However, the
effect of W160X was significantly weaker. As expected from previous
results with various Gal-SHP fusions (33), the wild-type and
truncated SHP proteins were expressed at equivalent levels (data not
shown). Thus, under circumstances where effects on DNA binding are
excluded and the possible involvement of any other receptors are
minimized, the SHP repression function is clearly required for full
inhibition.



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FIG. 8.
SHP requires the repression domain for full inhibition.
(A) A Gal4-RXR(L) vector (50 ng) was cotransfected into HepG2 cells
along with an SHP or SHPW160X vector in the indicated ratio (Gal:SHP).
At 20 h posttransfection, cells were treated with 1 µM
9-cis-RA or vehicle alone and incubated for 30 h.
Normalized luciferase expression is plotted as the mean fold activation
by 9-cis-RA ± standard deviation from three
independent experiments. (B) Gal4-RXR(L) vector (25 ng) was
cotransfected into HepG2 cells with 200 and 800 ng of SHP or SHPW160X
expression vector as indicated by concentration ratio (Gal:SHP).
Normalized luciferase activities are plotted as percent activation or
repression. Percent activation for each combination is relative to the
activation observed with Gal4-RXR(L) in the presence of
9-cis-RA and the absence of SHP. Percent repression is
relative to basal expression for each combination in the absence of
9-cis-RA. In this experiment, 800 ng of SHP or SHPW160X did
not affect luciferase expression in the presence of Gal4 alone. (C) A
thymidine kinase luciferase reporter containing the RXR response
element from the CRBPII promoter was cotransfected into HepG2 cells
with 50 ng of CDMhRXR and either the wild-type SHP or the SHPW160X
expression vector in the indicated ratio (RXR:SHP). Normalized
luciferase expression was determined in three independent experiments,
and the fold response to 1 µM LG1069 is shown.
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As noted above, the potential importance of the SHP repression function
was suggested by the effects of higher levels of SHP on Gal4-HNF4 (Fig.
1B). This was examined in more detail in the context of Gal4-RXR by a
comparison of the effects of higher levels of wild-type SHP and SHP
W160X. As demonstrated in Fig. 8B, the wild-type SHP decreased
expression to levels well below the basal level observed with Gal4-RXR
in the absence of ligand and SHP, but the repression-defective mutant
failed to do so.
The importance of the SHP repression function was also examined in the
context of native RXR. RXR transactivation of a reporter carrying the
hormone response element from CRBPII, which is efficiently activated by
RXR homodimers (25) (Fig. 8C), was decreased by both SHP and
SHP W160X. As expected, however, the wild-type SHP was a much more
effective inhibitor. In conclusion, while the SHP fragment capable of
efficient coactivator competition in the previous results does show
some inhibitory effects, they are much less than those observed with
the full-length SHP. Full inhibition by SHP clearly requires its direct
repressor activity, and at least for RXR, this activity appears to be
responsible for the majority of the observed inhibition.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Previous results have demonstrated that the unusual orphan
receptor SHP inhibits transactivation by many different members of the
nuclear receptor superfamily. This was initially attributed to
inhibition of DNA binding (32). However, SHP can also
inhibit transactivation by targets that do not show such DNA binding
effects, including the estrogen receptor (34), the Gal4
fusions described here, and at least a subset of the nuclear receptors
that bind DNA as monomers (Y.-K. Lee, unpublished observations). Two
additional mechanisms have been suggested to account for such
inhibitory effects. The first is based on the actions of the previously
described direct transcriptional repression function of SHP
(33). In this case, recruitment of the active repressor
function of SHP to DNA via interaction with another receptor would
account for the decreased expression. The second is based on the
competition between SHP and coactivators for binding to an activated
receptor. This model, which was initially independently suggested based
on biochemical results demonstrating the ability of SHP to inhibit
coactivator binding to ER (17), is confirmed and
significantly extended by the results described here.
Importantly, these two mechanisms are not mutually exclusive. This
suggests a two-step model for SHP repression, at least in cases where
it does not affect DNA binding. In the first step, SHP binding reduces
expression by decreasing coactivator binding to an activated receptor.
In the second, the direct actions of SHP as a transcriptional repressor
cause a further decrease in expression. This two-step model is
diagrammed in Fig. 9.

View larger version (42K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 9.
Two-step repression by SHP. In the first step, SHP
displaces coactivators by competing for binding to the receptor AF-2
surface. In the second step, the repressor function of the
receptor-bound SHP further decreases expression via an unknown
mechanism.
|
|
It is interesting that a very similar two-step repression model has
also been suggested for SMAD-mediated transactivation. In this case,
the factor TGIF was suggested to displace coactivators bound to SMADs
and also to function directly as a corepressor by recruiting histone
deacetylase activity (45). As previously described, SHP does
not appear to interact with the nuclear receptor corepressor NCoR
(33), and preliminary results indicate that SHP repression
is not affected by trichostatin A, a potent inhibitor of histone
deacetylase activity. Thus, the mechanism of the inhibitory effect of
SHP remains unclear. Nonetheless, the parallels in the actions of SHP
and TGIF emphasize the importance of mechanisms that function to rein
in the effects of a variety of activating signals and also suggest that
such two-step inhibition may be a general mechanism.
The existence of these two distinct steps for repression raises the
question of their relative contribution to the observed inhibitory
effects. The results described here demonstrate that the loss of the
SHP repression function leads to a loss of the majority of the
inhibition. Thus, at least for RXR, the direct activity of SHP as a
transcriptional repressor is apparently responsible for the majority of
the inhibitory effect. It is certainly possible that this activity
could be less effective with other receptors or in other cell types.
However, the apparent importance of this repressor function is
consistent with genetic results with DAX-1, the only nuclear receptor
superfamily member that is similar to SHP (50). These two
orphans both lack a conventional DNA binding domain and also share a
repression function that appears to be based on conserved C-terminal
sequences (15, 19, 33). Surveys indicate that this
C-terminal region is affected by all of the more than 40 mutations of
the human DAX-1 gene identified in patients with congenital adrenal
hypoplasia, including 7 single amino acid substitutions (19,
53). The striking prediction that all of these mutations affect
repressor function has been supported by more recent results (e.g.,
reference 31). This clearly supports the importance
of this function for DAX-1.
The results described here also add HNF-4 to the list of SHP targets.
The potential importance of the functional interaction between these
two orphans is supported by their coexpression in liver and pancreatic
beta cells. This is reinforced by the fact that only a minor
perturbation of HNF-4 activity results in the syndrome of mature-onset
diabetes of the young (48), suggesting that the modulation
of HNF-4 activity by SHP could have important metabolic effects. A
determination of the consequences of the loss of SHP function will be
required to assess the significance of this and other potential roles
for SHP.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Wongi Seol for initial yeast results and Pavlos Pissios
for helpful discussions. We also thank J. D. Chen for pCMX-SRC3 plasmid.
This work was supported by Public Health Service grants DK-46546 (to
D.D.M.) and HL-56104 (to M.H.-C.).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Molecular and Cellular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX 77030. Phone: (713) 798-3313. Fax: (713) 798-3017. E-mail: moore{at}bcm.tmc.edu.
 |
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