Previous Article | Next Article 
Molecular and Cellular Biology, May 2000, p. 3102-3115, Vol. 20, No. 9
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The Opposing Transcriptional Activities of the Two Isoforms of
the Human Progesterone Receptor Are Due to Differential Cofactor
Binding
Paloma H.
Giangrande,1
Erin
A. Kimbrel,1
Dean P.
Edwards,2 and
Donald
P.
McDonnell1,*
Department of Pharmacology and Cancer
Biology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina
27710,1 and Department of Pathology and
Molecular Biology Program, University of Colorado Health Sciences
Center, Denver, Colorado 802622
Received 14 September 1999/Returned for modification 2 November
1999/Accepted 24 January 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
The human progesterone receptor (PR) exists as two functionally
distinct isoforms, hPRA and hPRB. hPRB functions as a transcriptional activator in most cell and promoter contexts, while hPRA is
transcriptionally inactive and functions as a strong ligand-dependent
transdominant repressor of steroid hormone receptor transcriptional
activity. Although the precise mechanism of hPRA-mediated
transrepression is not fully understood, an inhibitory domain (ID)
within human PR, which is necessary for transrepression by hPRA,
has been identified. Interestingly, although ID is present within both
hPR isoforms, it is functionally active only in the context of
hPRA, suggesting that the two receptors adopt distinct
conformations within the cell which allow hPRA to interact with a
set of cofactors that are different from those recognized by hPRB.
In support of this hypothesis, we identified, using phage display
technology, hPRA-selective peptides which differentially modulate
hPRA and hPRB transcriptional activity. Furthermore, using a
combination of in vitro and in vivo methodologies, we demonstrate that
the two receptors exhibit different cofactor interactions.
Specifically, it was determined that hPRA has a higher affinity for
the corepressor SMRT than hPRB and that this interaction is
facilitated by ID. Interestingly, inhibition of SMRT activity, by
either a dominant negative mutant (C'SMRT) or histone deacetylase
inhibitors, reverses hPRA-mediated transrepression but does not
convert hPRA to a transcriptional activator. Together, these data
indicate that the ability of hPRA to transrepress steroid hormone
receptor transcriptional activity and its inability to activate
progesterone-responsive promoters occur by distinct mechanisms. To this
effect, we observed that hPRA, unlike hPRB, was unable to
efficiently recruit the transcriptional coactivators GRIP1 and SRC-1
upon agonist binding. Thus, although both receptors contain sequences
within their ligand-binding domains known to be required for
coactivator binding, the ability of PR to interact with cofactors in a
productive manner is regulated by sequences contained within the amino
terminus of the receptors. We propose, therefore, that hPRA is
transcriptionally inactive due to its inability to efficiently recruit
coactivators. Furthermore, our experiments indicate that hPRA
interacts efficiently with the corepressor SMRT and that this activity
permits it to function as a transdominant repressor.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
The progesterone receptor (PR) is a
ligand-activated transcription factor that belongs to the nuclear
receptor superfamily of transcription factors (16). In the
absence of hormone, the transcriptionally inactive receptor remains
associated with a large complex of heat shock proteins in the nuclei of
target cells (52). Upon hormone binding, the receptor
dissociates from the heat shock protein complex, dimerizes, and binds
to progesterone-responsive elements (PREs) within the regulatory
regions of target genes (4, 36). When bound to DNA, the PR
dimer contacts components of the general transcription machinery,
either directly (28) or indirectly via cofactors such as
coactivators and corepressors (21, 45, 51, 59), and either
positively or negatively modulates target gene transcription.
Adding to the complexity of its signal transduction pathway is the fact
that PR exists in humans as two isoforms, hPRA (94 kDa) and
hPRB (114 kDa) (33). hPRA is a truncated form of
hPRB, lacking the B upstream sequence (amino acids [aa] 1 to
164). The two isoforms are transcribed from a single gene by alternate
initiation of transcription from two distinct promoters (20,
30). While the two forms of PR have similar DNA- and
ligand-binding affinities (11), they have opposite
transcriptional activities (9, 37, 56, 58, 61). In most
contexts, hPRB functions as an activator of
progesterone-responsive genes, while hPRA is transcriptionally inactive (56, 58). In addition, hPRA also functions as a
strong transdominant repressor of hPRB (58) and human
estrogen receptor (hER) transcriptional activity in the presence of
both PR agonists and antagonists (18, 38, 58, 61).
Although the precise mechanism underlying the differential activities
of the two human PR isoforms is not fully understood, recent
structure-function studies of the two receptor isoforms suggest that
hPRB contains three specific activation functions (AF-1, -2, and
-3) whereas hPRA contains only two. AF-1, located within the amino
terminus, and AF-2, in the carboxyl terminus, are common to both
hPRA and hPRB. The third putative activation function, AF-3, is
located within the B upstream sequence, a region which is absent in
hPRA (47). We believe that AF-3 contributes to hPRB
transcriptional activity by suppressing the activity of an inhibitory
domain (ID) contained within sequences common to hPRA and hPRB.
In support of this view, Giangrande et al. identified within the first
140 aa of hPRA an ID which has been shown to prevent hPRA from
functioning as a transcriptional activator and permits this receptor
isoform to function as a transdominant repressor of heterologous
steroid receptor transcriptional activity (18). Deletion of
the N-terminal 140 aa (ID) from hPRA results in a receptor mutant
that is functionally indistinguishable from hPRB (18).
Furthermore, Hovland et al. have shown that sequences within hPRA
which contain an ID inhibit both AF-1 and AF-2 but not AF-3
(25). Cumulatively, these results support the hypothesis that hPRA, like hPRB, contains all of the sequences necessary for proper transcriptional activation; however, hPRA is
transcriptionally inactive because in the absence of AF-3, ID prevents
AF-1 and/or AF-2 from activating transcription. Thus, it seems that the
role of AF-3 is to override the inhibitory function of ID, thereby allowing hPRB to activate transcription (18, 25).
The presence of an ID within hPR, whose function is
masked in hPRB but not in hPRA, suggests that the distinct
functions of the two receptors may be due to the ability of these
proteins to adopt different conformations within the cell. This
hypothesis is further supported by our recent studies which show that
the amino termini of hPRB and hPRA interact differently with
the carboxyl terminus of the human PR ligand-binding domain (hLBD)
(54). Specifically, it was shown that the amino terminus of
hPRB, but not that of hPRA, interacts efficiently with its hLBD
both in vivo and in vitro in an agonist-dependent manner. Thus, the
differential interaction between the carboxyl and amino termini of
hPRB and hPRA may contribute to different cofactor
interactions, which in turn may result in differences in the
transcriptional activities of the two human PR isoforms. A potential
mechanistic basis for these differential effects was revealed recently
with the demonstration that the residue Ser294, which lies within the
ID, is preferentially phosphorylated in the context of hPRB as
opposed to hPRA (12).
To investigate the potential role(s) of differential cofactor
interactions, we examined the ability of hPRA and hPRB to
associate with different coactivators and corepressors and assessed the effect of these interactions on the receptors' transcriptional activity. We also investigated whether any of these factors could be
implicated in hPRA-mediated transrepression of hER transcriptional activity. From these analyses, we found that antagonist-bound hPRA
has a higher affinity for the corepressor SMRT than does antagonist-bound hPRB. The physiological significance of this interaction was demonstrated using a dominant negative variant of
SMRT, C'SMRT, to partially reverse hPRA transrepression of hER-mediated transcriptional activity. Furthermore, using both in vivo
and in vitro methodologies, we found that unlike hPRB, hPRA did
not associate efficiently with the coactivators SRC-1 and GRIP1. Thus,
differential cofactor association appears to explain why hPRA and
hPRB manifest distinct transcriptional activities in target cells.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Biochemicals.
DNA restriction and modification enzymes were
obtained from Promega (Madison, Wis.), Boehringer Mannheim, or New
England Biolabs (Beverly, Mass.). PCR reagents were obtained from
Perkin-Elmer or Promega. 17-
-Estradiol and trichostatin A (TSA) were
purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, Mo.). R5020 (promegestone) was
purchased from NEN Life Science Products. RU486 was a gift from Ligand
Pharmaceuticals (San Diego, Calif.). ZK98299 was a gift from Schering
Pharmaceuticals (Berlin, Germany). Secondary antibodies, Hybond-C Extra
(nitrocellulose) transfer membrane, and developing film were obtained
from Amersham (Arlington Heights, Ill.). The polyclonal antibody raised
against hPRA was a gift from Nancy Weigel (Baylor College of
Medicine, Houston, Tex.). The monoclonal antibody raised against
glutathione S-transferase (GST) was purchased from Sigma.
Plasmids.
pRST7-ER
and SV40-hPRB were provided by
Ligand Pharmaceuticals (13); the expression vectors
pBKC-hPRA and pBKC-hPRB were reported elsewhere
(16); pBKC-Rev-TUP1 and pBKC-
gal have been previously
described (35, 60).
The mammalian two-hybrid plasmid pCMX-Gal4-C'SMRT was a gift from
J. D. Chen (University of Massachusetts, Worcester);
Gal4N-RIP13
N4 was provided by D. D. Moore (Baylor College of
Medicine); plasmids pM-hPRA (32) and pBKC-DBD
(18) have been described previously. pM, containing the
yeast Gal4 DNA-binding domain (Gal4DBD), was purchased from Clontech
(Palo Alto, Calif.). pM-GRIP1(NR) was constructed as follows. A
PCR-generated fragment from pCMV.HA/GRIP1 (provided by M. Stallcup,
University of Southern California, Los Angeles) was subcloned into pM
previously digested with EcoRI and BamHI. The
sequences of the oligonucleotides for PCR are
5'-GGGGAATTCCACAGCCGGCTGCATGACAGC (forward) and
5'-CGCGGATCCTTCCGGTAAACCAATATC (reverse). pM-SRC-1(NR) was
constructed by digesting pM with EcoRI and BamHI
and subsequent subcloning of a PCR-generated fragment from pCMX-SRC-1
(provided by B. O'Malley, Baylor College of Medicine). The sequences
of the oligonucleotides used to generate the PCR product are
5'-CCGGAATTCCCGGGAGACAGTAAATACTCT (forward) and
5'-CGCGGATCCCAGGTTTGGAGTTGATCT (reverse). All PCR-based cloning was verified by sequencing to assess the fidelity of the resulting constructs. The mammalian two-hybrid plasmids pVP16 and
pVP16-T were purchased from Clontech; the VP16 fusion constructs pVP16-ER
, pVP16-GR, pVP16-hPRA, and pVP16-hPRB were
provided by Ligand Pharmaceuticals. pVP16-
hPRA was
constructed by digesting the
hPRA fragment from
pBKC-
hPRA (18) with EcoRI and
BamHI and subsequent cloning into pVP16 previously digested
with EcoRI and BamHI.
The reporter 5XGal4-TATA-LUC was a gift from X.-F. Wang (Duke
University Medical Center, Durham, N.C.). 2XPRE-TK-LUC contains
two
copies of a consensus PRE upstream of the thymidine kinase
promoter;
3XERE-TATA-LUC contains three copies of vitellogenin
estrogen-responsive element (ERE) cloned into pGL2-TATA-Inr
(Stratagene,
La Jolla, Calif.).
The GST fusion plasmid pGEX2TK-C'SMRT was provided by J. D. Chen;
pGEX-5X-1 was obtained from Pharmacia Biotech (Uppsala,
Sweden);
pGEX.1-GRIP1 was provided by M. Stallcup. The GST fusion
plasmid pGEX-5X-1-SRC-1(NR) was constructed as follows. The SRC-1(NR)
fragment was digested from pM-SRC-1(NR) with
EcoRI and
SalI and
subcloned into pGEX-5X-1 previously digested with
EcoRI and
SalI.
pT7-hPRA and pT7-hPRB for
in vitro translating hPRA and hPRB,
respectively, and
baculovirus-purified hPRA and hPRB proteins
were prepared as
previously described (
54). Baculovirus-expressed
ER

was
provided by PanVera Corporation (Madison, Wis.).
Cloning of peptides identified by phage display into a mammalian
expression vector.
pMsx has been previously described (10,
43). pM-LX-H10, pM-LX-E5, and pM-LX-E10 were constructed by
digesting the mBax plasmids, isolated using a focused phage peptide
library (10), with XhoI and XbaI to
release the fragments encoding the peptide sequences. The fragments
were then ligated into pMsx previously digested with SalI
and XbaI. The sequences of the Gal4DBD-peptide fusion
proteins were verified by Perkin-Elmer dye terminator cycle sequencing.
Mammalian transfection and luciferase assays.
HeLa or HepG2
cells were maintained in modified Eagle's medium containing 10% fetal
calf serum (Life Technologies, Grand Island, N.Y.). The cells were
plated in 24-well plates (coated with 0.1% gelatin for HepG2 cells)
24 h prior to Lipofectin-mediated transfection as described
previously (42). Cells were transfected using a total of 3 µg of DNA per well. After 3 to 5 h of incubation with a
DNA-Lipofectin mixture, the cells were washed and incubated with phenol
red-free medium supplemented with 10% charcoal-stripped fetal calf
serum and the appropriate ligand and/or TSA treatment for 24 h.
Luciferase and
-galactosidase assays were performed as described
previously (42).
GST pull-downs.
Baculovirus-purified hPRA and hPRB
or [35S]methionine-labeled hPRA and hPRB,
synthesized using a coupled in vitro transcription and translation
system as specified by the manufacturer (Promega), were incubated for
24 h at 4°C with either GST-Sepharose, GST-C'SMRT-Sepharose, GST-GRIP1-Sepharose, or GST-SRC-1(NR)-Sepharose, in NETN-A buffer (25 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris [pH 8.0], 1 mM EDTA, 0.5% NP-40) containing 1 µM appropriate ligand. Following incubation, the beads were washed
with NENT-B buffer (50 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris [pH 8.0], 1 mM EDTA, 0.5%
NP-40), and bound proteins were eluted in sample buffer and analyzed by
sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
(PAGE). The recombinant GST fusion proteins used for the in vitro
pull-down experiments were produced in Escherichia coli BL21. E. coli was transformed with either
pGEX2TA-C'SMRT, pGEX.1-GRIP1, pGEX-5X-1-SRC-1(NR), or pGEX-5X-1, grown
to an A600 of 2.0, and induced with 0.1 mM IPTG
(isopropyl-
-D-thiogalactopyranoside) for 2 h. The
cells were then harvested, lysed by sonication, and incubated with
glutathione-Sepharose beads (Pharmacia Biotech) in phosphate-buffered
saline containing 0.1% Tween 20 (PBST). The beads were subsequently
washed, resuspended in PBST, and used for the in vitro interaction studies.
Affinity measurements and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
(ELISA).
Aliquots (0.02 µg) of baculovirus-expressed full-length
hPRA or hPRB were diluted in 100 µl of 100 mM
NaHCO3 (pH 8.5) containing 1 µM RU486, added to the wells
of a 96-well Immunolon 4 plate (Dynex Technologies, Inc.), and
incubated at 4°C for 24 h. An equal amount of bovine serum
albumin (BSA) was used as a negative control target. The wells were
then blocked with 150 µl of 5% milk plus 0.1% BSA in 100 mM
NaHCO3 (pH 8.5) for 1 h at room temperature (RT).
Excess protein was removed with five washes of NENT-B buffer. Increasing concentrations (0 to 12 µg) of bacterially purified GST-C'SMRT diluted in 100 µl of NENT-A containing 1 µM RU486 were added to the immobilized proteins in each well and incubated at 4°C
for 24 h. The unbound protein was removed by washing five times as
mentioned above. Then 100 µl of a 1:1,000 solution of anti-GST
antibody was added to each well and incubated at RT for 1 h, after
which the wells were washed to remove excess antibody; 100 µl of a
1:5,000 solution of horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-rabbit
immunoglobulin G secondary antibody was then added to the wells and
incubated at RT for 1 h, followed by five washes of NENT-B. The
response was detected by incubation for 30 min at RT in ABTS
[2',2'-azinobis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonic acid)] plus 0.05%
H2O2, and the color change was measured at an optical density of 405 nm (OD405).
Purification of recombinant hPRA and hPRB.
Full-length His6-tagged human PRA and PRB were expressed in
the baculovirus insect cell system and purified by affinity
chromatography with nickel affinity resins (Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid;
Qiagen, Chatsworth, Calif.) as previously described (7). PR
was bound to R5020 during expression in Sf9 insect cells and was
approximately 90% pure based on silver staining of the gel used for
SDS-PAGE.
Isolation of hPRA-selective peptides.
Affinity selection
of phage display peptide libraries was performed to identify peptides
that could interact specifically with hPRA bound to R5020.
Specifically, 0.2 µg of baculovirus expressed full-length hPRA
bound to R5020 was diluted in 100 µl of 100 mM NaHCO3 (pH
8.5) containing 1 µM R5020, added to the wells of a 96-well Immunolon
4 plate (Dynex Technologies), and incubated at 4°C for 24 h. An
equal amount of BSA was added to the adjacent well as control target.
The wells were then blocked as mentioned above. Excess protein was
removed with five washes of NENT-B buffer; 25 µl of phage peptide
library (with >1010 page particles) diluted in 125 µl of
PBST plus 1 µM R5020 and 0.1% BSA was added to the wells, and the
plate was sealed and incubated for 8 h at RT. Nonbinding phage
were removed by washing with PBST. The bound phage was eluted with 100 µl of prewarmed (50°C) 50 mM glycine-HCl (pH 2.0) followed by 100 µl of 100 mM ethanolamine (pH 11.0). The first eluent was neutralized
by adding 200 µl of 200 mM Na2HPO4 (pH 8.5)
and combined with the second eluent. Phage eluted from the targets were
amplified in E. coli DH5
F' cells for 5 h, and the
supernatant containing amplified phage was collected for use in
subsequent rounds of panning. A total of three rounds of panning were
performed. Enrichment of hPRA-binding phage was confirmed by ELISA
as described above. Individual phage were plaque purified after the
second panning, and the peptide sequences were deduced by DNA sequencing.
 |
RESULTS |
hPRA and hPRB repress steroid hormone receptor
transcriptional activity by distinct mechanisms.
Previously, we
have shown that hPRB is a transcriptional activator while hPRA
functions predominantly as a repressor of progesterone-responsive promoters (18, 58, 61). The functional differences between hPRA and hPRB became even more obvious when we assessed the
impact of hPRA and hPRB on ER
-mediated transcription. This
was done by comparing the abilities of hPRA and hPRB to inhibit
estrogen activity in cells expressing different levels of ER
.
Specifically, HeLa cells were transfected with a 3XERE reporter
construct and expression vector for hPRA or hPRB, along with
increasing concentrations of an ER
expression vector.
Transcriptional activity was measured following the addition of
increasing concentrations of either the agonist R5020 (Fig.
1A) or the antagonist RU486 (Fig. 1B). As
expected, given our previous findings (61), we noted that increasing the expression level of ER
did not relieve inhibition of
ER
transcriptional activity by hPRA in the presence of R5020 or
RU486. This indicates that hPRA-mediated repression of ER
activity occurs in a manner which appears to be independent of ER
expression level. In contrast, increasing ER
expression levels completely reversed inhibition of ER
transcriptional activity by
R5020-bound hPRB (Fig. 1A). In addition, the observation that hPRB is a weak repressor of ER
activity only when bound to
agonist (Fig. 1A), not antagonist (Fig. 1B), suggests that hPRB
probably competes for a common coactivator required for maximal ER
activity. Together, these data, along with our previous observations,
suggest that hPRB, but not hPRA, competes directly with a
cofactor required for ER
transcriptional activity.

View larger version (25K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 1.
hPRA and hPRB repress SHR transcriptional
activity by distinct mechanisms. HeLa cells were transiently
transfected with 1.3 µg of 3XERE-TATA-LUC, 50 ng of pBKC- gal,
either 103 ng of pBKC-hPRA or 112 ng of pBKC-hPRB, and
increasing concentrations of pRST7-ER (100 ng, 600 ng, or 1,200 ng)
or 100 ng of pBKC-TUP1 (CONTROL) plus 1,200 ng of pRST7-ER . Variable
amounts of pBSII-KS were used for a total of 3 µg of DNA.
Transcriptional activity of the 3XERE-TATA-LUC reporter was measured
24 h after the addition of 10 8 M 17- -estradiol
alone or in the presence of increasing concentrations of R5020 (A) or
RU486 (B). A control was done in the absence of ligands (not shown).
The data are presented as percent activation where 100% represents a
measure of 17- -estradiol dependent transactivation by hER in the
absence of hPRA or hPRB (n = 2). The average
coefficient of variation at each point was <15%. NR, no progestins.
|
|
hPRA-selective peptides differentially modulate hPRA and
hPRB transcriptional activity.
The finding that hPRA, but
not hPRB, functioned as a transdominant inhibitor of hER signaling
and the observation that hPRA was a weak activator of
progesterone-responsive genes suggested that these two PR isoforms may
display different cofactor preferences. We reasoned, therefore, that it
might be possible to identify peptides which could competitively block
PR-cofactor interactions and that when expressed in target cells these
peptides would have different effects on hPRA and hPRB
signaling. To date, all of the coactivators which interact with and
modulate PR transcriptional activity have been shown to contain a
canonical LXXLL motif. Therefore, we screened a phage display library
which was created in the format X7LXXLLX7 for
peptides which interacted with agonist (R5020)-activated hPRA. The
peptides implicated from these screens were then subcloned into
mammalian expression vectors to assess their ability to interact with either hPRA or hPRB in a mammalian two-hybrid assay (Fig. 2). Specifically, we transiently
transfected HepG2 cells with a 5XGal4 reporter construct and expression
vectors for either VP16-hPRA or VP16-hPRB, along with
constructs expressing the receptor-interacting peptides fused
onto the Gal4DBD (Fig. 2A and B). Transcriptional activity was
measured in the absence or in the presence of the agonist R5020.
Interestingly, we observed that while all peptides tested were capable
of interacting with both receptors, subtle binding preferences for
either hPRA or hPRB were observed (Fig. 2C). These data suggest
that although hPRA and hPRB may adopt slightly different
conformations within target cells, the coactivator binding pocket
required for LXXLL binding is available on both receptors.

View larger version (20K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 2.
Interaction of hPRA-selective peptides with hPRA
and hPRB in vivo. (A) Schematic of the mammalian two-hybrid assay.
(B) Sequences of peptides which were fused to the Gal4DBD and used in
the mammalian two-hybrid assay. These peptides were isolated by
affinity selection from an X7LXXLLX7 phage
display library using R5020-activated hPRA. (C) HepG2 cells were
transiently transfected with 1,000 ng of 5XGal4-TATA-LUC reporter, 200 ng of pBKC- gal, either 400 ng of VP16-hPRA, VP16-hPRB, or
VP16 alone, and either 400 ng of a vector encoding Gal4DBD alone or
Gal4DBD fused to a peptide; 1,000 ng of pBSII-KS was used to
bring the total amount of DNA per triplicate up to 3 µg. At 24 h
after transfection, cells were treated with no hormone or with
10 7 M R5020 for 24 h. Transcriptional activity was
assayed on the 5XGal4-TATA-LUC reporter and represents an indirect
measure of the binding of the fusion proteins. Transfections were
normalized for efficiency using an internal -galactosidase
control plasmid (pBKC- gal). The data are represented as fold
induction over the no-peptide response for each condition tested, which
was set to 1.0. Each data point represents the average of triplicate
determinations of the transcriptional activity under the given
experimental conditions (n = 3).
|
|
To investigate the effects of these peptides on hPRA and hPRB
function, we tested the effect of expressing the LX-H10 peptide
on the
ability of these two receptors to activate transcription.
We reasoned
that if hPRA and hPRB activated target gene transcription
in
the same manner, overexpression of peptides which bound to
the major
coactivator pocket, present on both receptors, should
inhibit their
positive transcriptional activity. To examine this
possibility, we
transfected HeLa cells with a 3XPRE reporter construct
along with
vectors expressing either hPRA or hPRB and increasing
amounts
of a plasmid expressing the LX-H10 peptide. Transcriptional
activity
was measured following the addition of R5020 (Fig.
3).
Surprisingly, we observed that
although LX-H10 binds to both receptors,
it differentially affects
their transcriptional activity. Specifically,
we found that expression
of the LX-H10 peptide inhibited hPRB
transcriptional activity by
approximately 70% but had only a modest
effect on hPRA activity
(Fig.
3). A similar result was obtained
with other LXXLL peptides (data
not shown). We conclude from these
experiments that the mechanisms by
which hPRA and hPRB activate
transcription are not the same and
that the AF-2 coactivator binding
pocket does not seem to be required
for hPRA transcriptional activity.
Furthermore, these data suggest
that hPRA and hPRB may interact
with different subsets of
coactivators within target cells.

View larger version (15K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 3.
hPRA-interacting peptides differentially modulate
hPRA and hPRB transcriptional activities. HeLa cells were
transiently transfected with 1,500 ng of 3XPRE-TATA-LUC reporter, 50 ng
of pBKC- gal, either 50 ng of pBKC-hPRA or 50 ng of
pBKC-hPRB, and increasing amounts of pM-LX-H10 (from 0 to 1,350 ng). Various amounts of pM vector were used for a total of 3,000 ng of
DNA per triplicate. Transcriptional activity was assayed following the
addition of 10 7 M R5020. Transfections were normalized
for efficiency as mentioned above. The data are represented as
percent hPR transcriptional activity where 100% represents hPR
transcriptional activity in the absence of peptide. Each data point
represents the average of triplicate determinations from two separate
experiments.
|
|
The ID present within PR facilitates the interaction of hPRA
with the corepressor SMRT.
In addition to results of our peptide
studies, data from other studies suggest that the opposing activities
of the two isoforms of human PR may be due to the ability of the two
receptors to interact with different cofactors within the cell (Fig. 1
and 3; references 18 and 25). To
determine whether hPRA and hPRB bind to different cofactors, we
assessed, using both in vivo and in vitro binding assays, whether
hPRA and hPRB could interact with several corepressors and
coactivators which have been shown to be important for PR signaling.
We first examined whether there is a difference between the abilities
of hPRA and hPRB to interact with corepressors. This
was done
by performing a series of in vivo and in vitro binding
studies to
assess the abilities of hPRA and hPRB to interact with
SMRT in
the presence of different ligands. The ability of hPRA
to interact
in vivo with SMRT was tested using a mammalian two-hybrid
system
(
60). Specifically, we evaluated whether full-length
hPRA or hPRB, fused to the heterologous VP16 acidic activation
domain, could interact with the nuclear receptor-interacting domains
(NR boxes) of SMRT (C'SMRT; aa 981 to 1495) fused to the Gal4DBD
(Fig.
4A). The interaction between the
two isoforms of PR and
C'SMRT was assayed by measuring the ability of
VP16-hPRA or VP16-hPRB
fusions to activate
transcription from a Gal4-responsive reporter
plasmid (5XGal4-TATA-LUC)
with increasing concentrations of different
PR ligands. Consistent with
our previous report, hPRB interacted
with C'SMRT (Fig.
4B) in the
presence of RU486 and ZK98299 but
not in the presence of the agonist
R5020 or in the absence of
ligand, and the interaction between hPRB
and SMRT was stronger
with the class II antagonist ZK98299
(
60). Like hPRB, hPRA interacted
with C'SMRT when
bound to antagonists but not agonists. Interestingly,
the interaction
of hPRA with C'SMRT was ~5-fold stronger than
that of hPRB
with C'SMRT. The specificity of this interaction
was assessed by
showing that there was no difference in the ability
of hPRA and
hPRB to interact with the NR box of NCoR (data not
shown). These
results indicate that both hPRA and hPRB associate
with SMRT in
the presence of PR antagonists and that antagonist-bound
hPRA
interacts more efficiently with the corepressor SMRT than
antagonist-bound hPRB. Interestingly,

hPRA, the deletion
mutant
of hPRA lacking the ID (
18), does not interact
with C'SMRT as
efficiently as the full-length receptor (~5-fold)
(Fig.
4B). These
observations suggest that in the context of hPRA,
ID facilitates
binding to SMRT and that this function of ID is
repressed in hPRB.
The VP16-ID fusion alone does not interact with
Gal4-C'SMRT (data
not shown), suggesting that ID is not sufficient for
the interaction
of hPRA with SMRT. The differences in the
interactions of the
various VP16 fusion proteins were not due to
differences in protein
expression since all VP16 fusion constructs were
shown to express
at similar levels by Western immunoblot analysis (data
not shown).

View larger version (18K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 4.
The ID facilitates hPRA's interaction
with the corepressor SMRT. (A) Schematic of the mammalian two-hybrid
assay. The receptor-interacting domain of SMRT (C'SMRT; aa 981 to
1495) was fused to the Gal4DBD (aa 1 to 147). hPRA, hPRB, or
hPRA was fused onto VP16 (VP16 acidic activation domain; aa 411 to 455). The fusion constructs were cotransfected into HeLa cells along
with a reporter plasmid containing five copies of a Gal4-responsive
element (Gal4-RE) upstream of the luciferase gene. (B) HeLa cells were
transiently transfected with 0.5 µg of 5XGal4-TATA-LUC, 50 ng of
pBKC- gal, 1 µg of pCMX-Gal4-C'SMRT (Gal4-C'SMRT), 1 µg of either pVP16-hPRB, pVP16-hPRA, or pVP16- hPRA,
and 0.45 µg of pBSII-KS. Transcriptional activity was assayed on the
5XGal4-TATA-LUC reporter and represents an indirect measure of the
binding of the fusion proteins. Transcriptional activity was measured
following the addition of increasing concentrations of R5020, RU486, or
ZK98299. Transfections were normalized for efficiency using an internal
-galactosidase control plasmid (pBKC- gal). The data are
represented as fold induction over the no-hormone (No L) response,
which was set to 1.0. Each data point represents the average of
triplicate determinations of the transcriptional activity under the
given experimental conditions (n = 2).
|
|
The differential interaction of hPRA and hPRB with
C'SMRT was also assessed by in vitro binding analysis (Fig.
5A). Specifically,
the
ability of
35S-labeled hPRA or
35S-labeled hPRB to interact with either
bacterially expressed GST
alone or a GST-C'SMRT fusion protein was
assessed. These studies
revealed a specific, robust interaction between
hPRA and C'SMRT
in the presence of RU486. As previously reported,
hPRB also interacts
with C'SMRT, albeit in a ligand-independent
manner (
60). In
agreement with the mammalian two-hybrid
assay, in vitro-translated

hPRA did not interact efficiently
with GST-C'SMRT under any ligand
treatment condition (data not shown).
In conclusion, these in
vitro data correlate with the mammalian
two-hybrid data shown
in Fig.
4B.

View larger version (23K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 5.
hPRA has a higher affinity for the corepressor SMRT
than hPRB. For GST pull-down assays, the fusion protein
GST-C'SMRT, containing the carboxyl terminus of SMRT fused to GST, was
immobilized on glutathione beads and incubated at 4°C for 24 h
with either in vitro-translated hPRA or hPRB, in the presence
of either vehicle (NH), R5020, or RU486 (A) or baculovirus-purified
receptors bound to RU486 (B). An equimolar amount of GST was used as a
negative control for each condition tested. Following incubation at 4°C, the
unbound proteins were removed with five washes of NENT-B buffer. The
bound receptors were subsequently visualized by Western analysis using
a polyclonal antibody against PR. (C) Equal amounts of BSA and either
baculovirus-purified hPRA or hPRB bound to RU486 were
immobilized onto 96-well plates and incubated in the presence of
increasing concentrations of bacterially purified GST-C'SMRT.
Following incubation at 4°C for 24 h, the unbound fusion protein
was removed by washing five times with NENT-B buffer. The amount of
bound GST-C'SMRT was determined by ELISA. The response was measured at
405 nm after 30 min of incubation with ABTS plus 0.05%
H2O2. The OD405 readings for
hPRA and hPRB were normalized by subtracting those obtained
with the BSA control and subsequently setting the highest reading value
to OD405 = 1. The data were fitted to a two-site
binding curve, and the values for each curve are reported. Hill-1 and
Hill-2 for hPRA = 3.66 and 0.33, respectively; Hill-1 and
Hill-2 for hPRB = 2.49 and 0.43 respectively.
ymax-1 and ymax-2 for
hPRA = 0.272 and 0.098 respectively;
ymax-1 and ymax-2 for
hPRB = 0.274 and 0.052, respectively.
|
|
To determine whether the interaction of hPRA and hPRB with
C'SMRT was direct, we repeated the GST pull-down experiment using
RU486-activated hPRA and hPRB which had been purified from
baculovirus
(Fig.
5B). Not surprisingly, a greater amount of hPRA
than hPRB
bound to GST-C'SMRT. Together these data suggest
that both hPRA
and hPRB bind to C'SMRT directly and that the
interaction of hPRA
with C'SMRT is stronger than that of
hPRB with C'SMRT.
hPRA has a higher affinity for C'SMRT than hPRB.
To
determine whether hPRA has a higher affinity for C'SMRT than
hPRB, we used an ELISA to quantitate the binding of the receptors to C'SMRT (Fig. 5C). Equal amounts of baculovirus-purified hPRA and hPRB were immobilized onto 96-well plates and incubated with increasing concentrations of GST-C'SMRT. Any unbound fusion protein was washed away, and the amount of GST-C'SMRT bound was
determined using an antibody against GST. Our binding data best fit a
two-site binding curve, suggesting that the receptors contact
C'SMRT at multiple points. The first binding site has 50%
effective concentrations (EC50) for hPRA and hPRB
of 13.4 and 43.1 µM, respectively (Fig. 5C, EC50-1)
suggesting that hPRA has ~3-fold-higher affinity for C'SMRT at
this site than hPRB. This finding further supports our in vivo
binding data (Fig. 4B). In addition to site 1, hPRA and hPRB
contact C'SMRT on a second site which has lower capacity but higher
binding affinity than site 1 (Fig. 5C, EC50-2).
Determination of whether this is in fact the case requires further experimentation.
The dominant negative variant of SMRT, C'SMRT, can partially
reverse hPRA-mediated transrepression of hER transcriptional
activity.
Recently, we showed that removal of ID from the A
isoform of PR causes hPRA to lose its ability to transrepress
heterologous steroid hormone receptor transcriptional activity
(18). This observation, together with the mammalian
two-hybrid data (Fig. 4B), suggests that ID, in the context of
hPRA, allows human PR to acquire a conformation that is optimal for
corepressor binding and/or ID is one of the corepressor binding sites
present in PR. These observations suggest that the ability of hPRA
to transrepress ER
-mediated activity may involve the corepressor SMRT.
To test whether SMRT is involved in hPRA-mediated
transrepression of hER transcriptional activity, we studied the
effect of
overexpressing the dominant negative C'SMRT on
hPRA-mediated transrepression
of hER transcriptional
activity. This was accomplished by transiently
transfecting HeLa
cells with expression vectors for hER and hPRA
and the
3XERE-TATA-LUC reporter construct in the presence of increasing
amounts of either Gal4-SMRT, Gal4-C'SMRT, or Gal4-

N4
(Fig.
6).
In this experiment, increasing
amounts of Gal4-

N4 had no effect
on hPRA-mediated
transrepression in the presence of 10
7 M RU486 (Fig.
6C).
Interestingly, C'SMRT reversed hPRA-mediated
transrepression of
ER

activity in a dose-dependent manner (from
15 to 77% ER

transcriptional activity). Increasing amounts of
Gal4-SMRT further
enhanced the ability of hPRA to repress ER
transcriptional
activity (from 20 to 5% ER

transcriptional activity)
(Fig.
6A),
directly implicating SMRT in hPRA-mediated transrepression.
Increasing amounts of Gal4-C'SMRT had no effect on estradiol-mediated
ER

transcriptional activity in the absence of hPRA (data not
shown).

View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 6.
C'SMRT can partially reverse hPRA-mediated
repression of hER transcriptional activity. HeLa cells were transiently
transfected with 1 µg of 3XERE-TATA-LUC, 50 ng of pBKC- gal, 450 ng
of pRST7-ER , 300 ng of pBKC-hPRA, and increasing concentrations
(ranging from 0 to 1.2 µg) of either Gal4-SMRT (A), Gal4-C'SMRT (B),
or N4, used as a control (C). Various amounts of pBKC-DBD were added
to balance the amount of input Gal4DBD. Transcriptional activity of the
3XERE-TATA-LUC reporter was measured 24 h after the addition of
10 7 M 17- -estradiol and 10 7 M RU486. A
control was done in the absence of ligands (not shown). The data are
presented as percent activation where 100% represents a measure of
17- -estradiol-dependent transactivation by hER in the absence of
RU486 (Cont). The average coefficient of variation at each point was
<12% (n = 2).
|
|
To test the effects of various PR ligands on the ability of C'SMRT to
reverse hPRA-mediated transrepression, we transfected
HeLa cells as
described above and induced them with 10
7 M estradiol
alone or with either 10
7 M R5020, 10
7 M
RU486, or 10
7 M ZK98299 (Fig.
7). In the presence of R5020,
C'SMRT reversed
hPRA-mediated transrepression of ER

activity in a dose-dependent
manner (from 25 to 46% ER

transcriptional activity). Reversal
of hPRA-mediated
transrepression by C'SMRT in the presence of
the class I antagonist
RU486 was from 15 to 62% of ER

transcriptional
activity.
Interestingly, in the presence of class II antagonist
ZK98299, C'SMRT
reversed hPRA-mediated transrepression of hER
activity from
16% to about 80% (Fig.
7). These results suggest
that C'SMRT
is better at reversing hPRA-mediated transrepression
when the
receptor is bound to antagonists rather than to agonists.
This
observation correlates with the mammalian two-hybrid data
that indicate
that the interaction of hPRA with Gal4-C'SMRT is
greater in the
presence of antiprogestins (Fig.
4B).

View larger version (28K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 7.
The ability of C'SMRT to reverse hPRA-mediated
transrepression is ligand dependent. HeLa cells were transiently
transfected as for Fig. 4. Transcriptional activity was measured
24 h after the addition of 10 7 M 17- -estradiol
and either 10 7 M R5020, 10 7 M RU486, or
10 7 M ZK98299. A control was done in the absence of
ligands (not shown). The data are presented as percent activation where
100% represents a measure of 17- -estradiol-dependent
transactivation by hER in the absence of progestins or antiprogestins
(Cont) for each experimental condition. The average coefficient of
variation at each point was <12%. The data from a single
representative experiment are shown (n = 3).
|
|
The deacetylase inhibitor TSA partially reverses
hPRA-mediated transrepression of hER transcriptional
activity.
The transcriptional silencers NCoR and SMRT have been
shown to exist in a complex with the repressor mSin3 and the histone deacetylase HD-1 (also known as HDAC1), suggesting that corepressors mediate gene repression by acting as bridging factors between the
receptor and histone deacetylases, thus recruiting the latter to the
receptor-DNA complex (1, 22, 41). To assess whether histone
deacetylases play a role in hPRA-mediated transrepression of
ER
transcriptional activity, we examined whether the deacetylase inhibitor TSA could reverse hPRA-mediated transrepression (Fig. 8). We transiently transfected HeLa cells
with expression constructs for hER and either hPRA or a control
plasmid together with the 3XERE-TATA-LUC reporter construct in the
presence of 10
7 M estradiol and 10
7 M RU486
alone or together with increasing concentrations of TSA. Estradiol-dependent activation of the 3XERE-TATA promoter in HeLa cells
expressing hER together with a control plasmid was not
significantly affected by coaddition of increasing concentrations
of TSA (data not shown). In this experiment, TSA is capable of
partially reversing hPRA-mediated transrepression of ER
activity
in a dose-dependent manner. In conclusion, the experiments detailed
above suggest that the strong interaction of hPRA with the SMRT
corepressor complex might be responsible for the inability of hPRA
to activate transcription, as well as its ability to act as a potent
transrepressor of heterologous steroid hormone receptor transcriptional
activity.

View larger version (17K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 8.
The deacetylase inhibitor TSA can partially reverse
hPRA-mediated repression of hER transcriptional activity.
HeLa cells were transiently transfected with 1.5 µg of
3XERE-TATA-LUC, 50 ng of pBKC- gal, 500 ng of pRST7-ER ,
and either 481 ng of pBKC-hPRA or 467 ng of pBKC-Rev-TUP1 (not
shown). Variable amounts of pBSII-KS were used for a total of 3 µg of
DNA. Transcriptional activity of the 3XERE-TATA-LUC reporter was
measured 24 h after the addition of 10 7 M
17- -estradiol and 10 7 M RU486, alone or in combination
with increasing concentrations of TSA (0, 10 8,
10 7, and 10 6 M). A control was done in the
absence of ligands (not shown). The data are presented as percent
activation where 100% represents a measure of
17- -estradiol-dependent transactivation by hER in the absence of
RU486 (CONT). The data from one representative experiment are shown
(n = 2). The average coefficient of variation at each
point was <10%.
|
|
Inactivation of the nuclear receptor silencer SMRT does not convert
hPRA to a transcriptional activator.
The findings detailed
above indicate that hPRA forms a strong association with the
corepressor SMRT, implying that hPRA recruits a repressor
complex, composed of SMRT and histone deacetylases, to the
promoters of target genes, thereby repressing transcription of
target genes. Furthermore, the association of hPRA with the SMRT corepressor complex seems to play an important role in
transrepression by hPRA (Fig. 6). To test whether a complex of SMRT
and histone deacetylases with hPRA was also responsible for the
inability of hPRA to activate transcription, we studied the
effect of (i) overexpression of C'SMRT (Fig.
9A) and (ii) increasing concentrations of
TSA (Fig. 9B) on hPRA-mediated transcription. Specifically, we
transfected HeLa cells with an expression vector for hPRA or hPRB, alone or in the presence of increasing concentrations of C'SMRT, together with the 2XPRE-TK-LUC reporter construct, and induced
them with 10
7 M R5020 (Fig. 9A). A control transfection,
to assess the basal transcriptional activity of the reporter in the
absence of receptors, was included, and the value was set to 100%.
Clearly, hPRB-mediated transcriptional activity in the presence of
ligand was not significantly affected by increasing C'SMRT
concentrations. In contrast, while increasing concentrations of
C'SMRT completely reversed hPRA-mediated repression of
the basal promoter, they failed to activate hPRA transcription
beyond the basal level of the reporter (Fig. 9A).

View larger version (37K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 9.
Inactivation of the nuclear receptor silencer SMRT does
not convert hPRA to a transcriptional activator. (A) HeLa cells
were transiently transfected with 1.5 µg of 2XPRE-TK-LUC, 50 ng of
pBKC- gal, either 52 ng of pBKC-hPRB, 48 ng of pBKC-hPRA, or
46 ng of pBKC-RevTUP1, and increasing concentrations (from 0 to 1 µg)
of Gal4-C'SMRT. Various amounts of pBKC-DBD were added to balance the
amount of input Gal4DBD. pBSK-II was added to normalize the total DNA
to 3 µg. The transcriptional activity of these vectors was assayed on
a 2XPRE-TK-LUC reporter and measured after the addition of
10 7 M R5020. Transfections were normalized for efficiency
as mentioned previously. R5020-mediated transcriptional activity in the
presence of increasing concentrations C'SMRT was normalized to the
no-ligand control for each concentration of C'SMRT used. Each data
point represents the average of triplicate determinations (± standard
error of the mean) from two separate experiments (n = 2). The control represents basal reporter activity in the presence
of control vector and was set to 100%. (B) HeLa cells were transiently
transfected with 1.5 µg of 2XPRE-TK-LUC, 50 ng of pBKC- gal, either
50 ng of pBKC-hPRA or 48 ng of pBKC-Rev-TUP1, and various amounts
of pBSK-II for a total of 3 µg. Transcriptional activity of the
constructs was measured following the addition of 10 7 M
R5020 alone or in combination with increasing concentrations (0, 10 8, 10 7, and 10 6 M) of the
deacetylase inhibitor TSA. Transfections were normalized for efficiency
as mentioned above. R5020-mediated transcriptional activity in the
presence of increasing concentrations of TSA was normalized to the
no-ligand control for each TSA treatment used. Each data point
represents the average of triplicate determinations (± standard error
of the mean) from two separate experiments (n = 2).
|
|
To test whether histone deacetylases were also involved in hPRA
repression of progesterone-responsive promoters, we transiently
transfected HeLa cells with an expression vector for hPRA or
hPRB
together with the 2XPRE-TK-LUC reporter construct and induced
them with 10
7 M R5020 alone or with increasing
concentrations of TSA (Fig.
9B). hPRB-mediated
transcriptional activity in the presence of
ligand was not affected by
increasing TSA concentrations. The
basal activity of the 2XPRE-TK
promoter was repressed (63%) by
agonist-activated hPRA, as
observed in Fig.
9A. Increasing concentrations
of TSA reversed
hPRA-mediated repression of basal activity in
a dose-dependent
manner. The increase in basal activity upon TSA
treatment suggests that
histone deacetylases are recruited to
progesterone-responsive promoters
by hPRA. Not surprisingly, even
at the highest concentration
of TSA used, hPRA was unable to activate
transcription from
the 2XPRE-TK promoter above the inherent basal
level (Fig.
9B).
Together, these findings suggest that inhibition
of corepressor
function is not sufficient to convert hPRA to a
transcriptional
activator. In addition, however, they demonstrate
that
agonist-activated hPRA can suppress basal transcription by
possibly
recruiting the SMRT repressor complex to the promoters
of target
genes.
hPRB, but not hPRA, interacts efficiently with the NR boxes
of the coactivator proteins GRIP1 and SRC-1.
It follows, then,
that one possible explanation for why agonist-bound hPRA fails to
activate transcription is that unlike hPRB, hPRA fails to
effectively recruit coactivators. Therefore, hPRB's ability to
associate with coactivator proteins and displace corepressors results
in an increase in PR transcriptional activity. Conversely, we propose
that even when bound to agonist, hPRA fails to efficiently recruit
coactivators and thus is unable to displace corepressors.
To analyze the ability of hPRA and hPRB to interact with
coactivator proteins, we used the mammalian two-hybrid system.
Specifically,
we looked at the ability of full-length hPRA or
hPRB fused to
the heterologous VP16 acidic activation domain to
interact with
the NR box of either GRIP1 [GRIP1(NR)] or SRC-1
[SRC-1(NR)] fused
to the Gal4DBD (Fig.
10A). Interaction between the two
isoforms
of PR and GRIP1(NR) and SRC-1(NR) respectively, was
assayed by
measuring the ability of VP16-hPRA, VP16-hPRB, and
VP16-

hPRA
fusions to activate transcription from a
Gal4-responsive reporter
plasmid (5XGal4-TATA-LUC) in the
presence of R5020. VP16-ER

fusion
protein was used as a
positive control. As expected, ER

interacts
with both
GRIP1(NR) and SRC-1(NR) in the presence of estradiol.
We also
observed a slight interaction of ER

with the coactivators
in the
absence of hormone. This interaction disappeared with the
addition of
antagonist (data not shown). hPRB interacts with both
SRC-1(NR)
and GRIP1(NR) in the presence of R5020 (625- and 37-fold
over
control). Importantly, R5020-bound hPRA forms a weaker interaction
with both SRC-1(NR) and GRIP1(NR) (50- and 8-fold over control)
compared to hPRB. The deletion mutant of hPRA, lacking ID,
which
we previously showed to function as a transcriptional activator
of progesterone-responsive promoters (
18), formed a slightly
stronger interaction with GRIP1(NR) and SRC-1(NR) compared to
wild-type hPRA. The interaction of

hPRA with the
coactivators
was not as strong as that of hPRB with the
coactivators, suggesting
that the unique amino terminus of hPRB
plays an important role
in receptor-coactivator interaction. The
mammalian two-hybrid
data suggest that the ability of hPRB and
hPRA to interact with
coactivators correlates with the
transcriptional activity of both
receptors.

View larger version (40K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 10.
hPRA interacts weakly with the NR boxes of the
coactivator proteins GRIP1 and SRC-1. (A) HeLa cells were transiently
transfected with 0.5 µg of 5XGal4-TATA-LUC, 50 ng of pBKC- gal, 1 µg of either pM-GRIP1(NR) or pM-SRC-1(NR), 1 µg of either
pVP16-T, pVP16-ER , pVP16-hPRB, pVP16-hPRA, or
pVP16- hPRA, and 0.45 µg of pBSII-KS. Transcriptional activity
of the luciferase gene was assayed on the 5XGal4-TATA-LUC reporter as
in Fig. 2B. Transcriptional activity was measured following the
addition of 10 7 M R5020 for PR or 10 7 M
17- -estradiol for ER (H); a control was done in the absence of
ligands (NH). Transfections were normalized for efficiency as mentioned
previously. The data are represented as fold induction over the control
interaction between Gal4-GRIP1(NR) or Gal4-SRC-1(NR) and
VP16-T for each ligand treatment group, which was normalized to 1.0. Each data point represents the average of triplicate determinations
from three separate experiments. The average coefficient of variation
at each point was <10% (n = 3). (B and C) GST
pull-down assays. The fusion proteins GST-GRIP1(NR) (top) and
GST-SRC-1(NR) (bottom) were immobilized on glutathione beads and
incubated at 4°C for 24 h with in vitro-translated
35S-hPRA or 35S-hPRB in the presence of
vehicle (NH), R5020, or RU486 (B) or baculovirus-purified hPRB
bound to R5020 or RU486 (C). The bound baculovirus-purified receptors
were analyzed by Western analysis using a polyclonal antibody against
PR. An equimolar amount of GST alone was used as a negative control for
each condition tested.
|
|
The ability of hPRA and hPRB to interact with SRC-1(NR) and
GRIP1(NR) was also assessed in vitro using a GST pull-down assay
(Fig.
10B). Specifically, we determined the ability of
35S-labeled hPRA or
35S-labeled hPRB to
interact with either bacterially expressed GST
alone,
GST-GRIP1(NR), or GST-SRC-1(NR). These assays revealed
a
specific interaction between hPRB and both GRIP1(NR) and
SRC-1(NR)
in the presence of R5020 but not in the presence of RU486
or in
the absence of ligands. Interestingly, under the same conditions,
hPRA did not interact with GRIP1(NR) and SRC-1(NR),
suggesting
that additional factors, which are not present in
the crude extracts,
may be needed to account for the ability of
hPRA to interact with
the coactivators in vivo (Fig.
10A). To
determine whether the association
of hPRB with the coactivators was
direct, we carried out a GST
pull-down assay using GST-SRC-1(NR)
incubated with baculovirus-purified
receptors in the presence of R5020
or RU486 (Fig.
10C). This analysis
revealed that hPRB interacts
directly with SRC-1(NR) in the presence
of the agonist R5020 but
not the antagonist RU486 (Fig.
10C). hPR-A
and SRC-1(NR) did not
interact under the same conditions (data
not shown). Together, these
data indicate that hPRA and hPRB form
different interactions
with SRC-1(NR) and GRIP1(NR), implying
that the failure of
hPRA to activate transcription may be due
to its inability to
efficiently recruit coactivators as well as
to its inherent higher
affinity for corepressor proteins (Fig.
4 and
5).
hPRA is not targeted to the ER
coactivator complex.
While the inability of hPRA to form productive interactions with
coactivators may explain why hPRA is transcriptionally inactive, the inherent higher affinity of hPRA, but not hPRB, for SMRT
may be important for hPRA-mediated inhibition of ER
transcriptional activity (Fig. 6). To further elucidate the mechanism
of hPRA inhibition of ER
activity, we used both in vivo and in
vitro binding assays to determine whether hPRA is targeted to
the ER
transcription complex, thereby interfering with the ability
of ER
to activate transcription. Specifically, we assessed the
ability of VP16-ER
to bind to Gal4-hPRA in the presence of
R5020 and estradiol in a mammalian two-hybrid system (Fig.
11). VP16-hPRA was used as a
positive control in this assay. We tested for potential protein-protein
interactions by assessing the ability of Gal4-PRA to recruit VP16-ER
or VP16-hPRA receptor fusions to DNA, using a mammalian two-hybrid
assay. The results of this analysis indicated that hPRA-hPRA
homodimers were capable of activating the Gal4-responsive promoter in
the presence of R5020. No association between hPRA and ER
was
observed under the same conditions (Fig. 11), suggesting that ER
is
not targeted to hPRA in vivo. While it is possible that hPRA
and ER
do exist in a complex within cells, it is possible that
the mammalian two-hybrid assay is unable to detect such associations. Another possibility is that ER
needs to be bound to DNA in order to
recruit hPRA. We are currently in the process of assessing these possibilities. In conclusion, we are currently unable to demonstrate a direct association of hPRA with ER
, suggesting that hPRA interferes with ER
signaling in another manner,
possibly by preventing the association of ER
with a required factor.

View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 11.
hPRA does not associate with the ER
transcription complex. HeLa cells were transiently transfected
with 500 ng of 5XGal4-TATA-LUC, 50 ng of pBKC- gal,
1,000 ng of pM-hPRA, and either 1,000 ng of pVP16-T
(control), pVP16-hPRA, or pVP16-ER (gray bars).
Transcriptional activity was assayed on the 5XGal4-TATA-LUC reporter
following the addition of 10 7 M 17- -estradiol or
10 7 M R5020 and represents an indirect measure of the
binding of the fusion proteins. Transfections were normalized for
efficiency as mentioned above. The data are represented as fold
induction over the control interaction between Gal4-hPRA and VP16-T
in the absence of ligands, which was normalized to 1.0 (black bars).
Each data point represents the average of triplicate determinations
from three separate experiments.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Recent insights into the mechanism of steroid hormone action have
advanced our understanding of PRA action significantly and suggested
how the two forms of PR, hPRA and hPRB, manifest their unique regulatory activities in target cells. Specifically, it has been demonstrated that nuclear hormone receptors, upon binding their cognate ligands, undergo distinct conformational changes. This
event permits the dissociation of the receptors from corepressor complexes, possessing histone deacetylase activity and facilitates their interaction with coactivator complexes, which display histone acetylase activity. As a consequence, the DNA-bound receptor is able to
positively regulate target gene transcription (19, 23, 48, 50, 55,
60, 62). In support of this model, it has been shown that the
ability of nuclear receptors to repress target gene transcription
correlates with their ability to bind to the corepressors NCoR and SMRT
(21, 60). Conversely, transcriptional activation by nuclear
hormone receptors was observed to correlate with the recruitment of
coactivators to the promoter region of target genes (19, 24, 29,
43, 49). To determine whether the opposing transcriptional
activities of hPRA and hPRB were due to differential
cofactor association, we examined the abilities of hPRA and
hPRB to interact with different coactivators and corepressors and
assessed the effects of these associations on the receptors' transcriptional activities. Using both in vivo and in vitro
methodologies, we found that antagonist-bound hPRA has a higher
affinity for the NR box of SMRT (C'SMRT) than antagonist-bound
hPRB (Fig. 4 and 5). This interaction appears to be
physiologically relevant since overexpression of C'SMRT (a
dominant negative SMRT) effectively reverses
hPRA-mediated transrepression of ER
transcriptional activity. In addition, overexpression of SMRT enhanced the ability of
hPRA to inhibit hER-mediated transcriptional activity.
Significantly, we also observed that unlike hPRB, hPRA did not
associate efficiently with the coactivators SRC-1 and GRIP1. Thus, the
robust interaction of hPRA with SMRT together with its inability to
efficiently engage coactivators appears to explain why hPRA is a
repressor of progesterone-responsive promoters.
Initially, it was proposed that the differences in the transcriptional
activities of hPRA and hPRB were due to a third activation function, AF-3, present within the extreme amino terminus of hPRB, a region that is absent in hPRA (47). Thus, it was
considered that functional synergy between the activation functions
located in the amino terminus (AF-3 and AF-1) and the carboxyl terminus (AF-2) was required for maximal hPRB transcriptional activity. However, unlike AF-1 and AF-2, AF-3 does not demonstrate autonomous activity when fused to a heterologous DBD (40, 47),
suggesting that instead of functioning as a classical AF, AF-3 might be
required for proper AF-1 and AF-2 transcriptional activity. For
instance AF-3 may contribute to hPRB transcriptional activity
directly, by enhancing the activity of AF-1 or AF-2, or indirectly, by
suppressing an inhibitory function contained within sequences common to
both hPRA and hPRB (18, 30). Evidence in support of
the latter hypothesis came from our studies, as well as those of
others, which identified an ID within the amino terminus of
hPRA which, when deleted, resulted in a receptor mutant
functionally indistinguishable from hPRB (18, 25,
26). Specifically, it was demonstrated that the first 140 aa of
hPRA are necessary for its ability to function as a transcriptional
inhibitor as well as a transrepressor of heterologous steroid
receptor transcriptional activity (18). Thus, one role of
AF-3 is to override the function of the ID present within the amino
terminus of the receptor, allowing hPRB to activate transcription
(18, 25).
In addition to hPR, several other transcription factors have been
shown to contain both activation and repression functions (2, 3,
8, 15, 17, 21, 34). Of particular relevance to our studies of
hPRA, it has been shown in vitro that the ability of ROR
to
repress transcription correlates with the ability of the inhibitory
domain within ROR
to recruit the corepressors NCoR and SMRT
(21). In addition, ROR
was shown to preferentially associate with NCoR and not SMRT in vivo. When we tested the ability of
hPRA and hPRB to interact with NCoR and SMRT in the presence of
antagonist, we found that while both receptors associate with NCoR,
hPRA has a higher affinity for SMRT than hPRB (Fig. 5C). Furthermore, a deletion mutant lacking the inhibitory domain,
hPRA, does not interact efficiently with SMRT. This
implies that like the case for ROR
, a specific domain within
hPRA is required for corepressor interactions.
The ability of agonist-activated nuclear receptors to activate
transcription correlates with their ability to displace corepressors and engage coactivators (reviewed in reference 55).
Not surprisingly, therefore, we were able to show in this study that
agonist-bound hPRB, but not hPRA, can form a productive
interaction with coactivators, thus allowing hPRB to activate
transcription from progesterone-responsive promoters. This
suggested that hPRA may be unable to completely dissociate from
corepressors and thus may not be able to recruit coactivators. However,
the fact that R5020-bound hPRA was unable to activate transcription
in cells expressing a dominant negative variant of SMRT, or in the
presence of the histone deacetylase inhibitor TSA, suggests that
dissociation from corepressors is not sufficient for hPRA to
activate transcription (Fig. 8). This observation, together with the
mammalian two-hybrid data, implies that agonist-bound hPRA, unlike
hPRB, does not efficiently recruit coactivators. It appears,
therefore, that the unique sequences present at the amino terminus of
hPRB are required for proper transcriptional activation.
In most cell and promoter contexts, the transcriptional activity of
steroid hormone receptors appears to require the functional synergy
between the amino and carboxyl termini of each individual receptor
(6, 39, 40, 46, 53, 57). This synergy occurs as a
consequence of an agonist-dependent association between the amino and
carboxyl AFs of ER
(31), the androgen receptor (5, 14, 27), and hPRA and hPRB, respectively (54).
Interestingly, in the case of hPRA and hPRB, the amino terminus
of hPRB containing AF-3 was shown to interact more efficiently with
the carboxyl terminus of the receptor than the amino terminus of
hPRA lacking AF-3 (54). This agonist-dependent
interaction was enhanced by the addition of SRC-1 and CBP, while
dominant negative variants of SRC-1 and CBP completely abolished this
interaction, suggesting that these coactivators may be required for
transcriptional synergy between the amino-terminal and
carboxyl-terminal AFs of the receptor (54). Interestingly, a
role for coactivators as bridging factors between the amino and
carboxyl AFs of receptors is supported by the observation that SRC-1
can interact with both the amino and carboxyl termini of PR
(44).
Previously, we have shown that the agonist-dependent interaction of the
PR carboxyl terminus with the amino terminus of hPRB is more robust
than that with the amino terminus of hPRA, an activity which
mirrors their activity as transcriptional activators (18, 25, 26,
38, 56, 58, 60). Thus, the ability of hPRB to function as an
activator of transcription could be due to the fact that hPRB, but
not hPRA, undergoes a conformational change which is conducive to
coactivator binding. The ability of hPRA and hPRB to adopt
different conformations within the cell is also supported by our
peptide analysis (Fig. 2 and 3). The peptide competition data presented
in Fig. 3 also suggest that the two receptors are bound to different
cellular factors which may, in turn, explain their distinct functions
within the cell. For example, hPRB, unlike hPRA, is likely to
be associated with AF-2-type coactivators. It is not surprising, then,
that the LX-H10 peptide, which contains an LXXLL motif common to these
coactivators, was an efficient inhibitor of hPRB activity but had
no effect on hPRA activity when overexpressed in cells along with
the receptors (Fig. 3). This hypothesis is further supported by
additional findings which show that agonist-bound hPRB, but not
agonist-bound hPRA, directly interacts with the NR boxes of the
coactivators GRIP1 and SRC-1 in vitro (Fig. 10B). Although our studies
focused on the ability of hPRA to interact specifically with the
previously defined NR boxes of SRC-1 and GRIP1, it has been reported
previously that both hPRA and hPRB interact with full-length
SRC-1A in the presence of agonist (44). However, in these
latter studies it was not determined whether hPRA and hPRB can
bind directly to the sequences of SRC-1 used in this study. In
addition, the SRC-1(NR) protein used in our studies did not contain the
fourth LXXLL motif found in SRC-1A. Together, these observations
suggest that the two PR isoforms do not interact in the same manner
with SRC-1.
Our working model to explain the opposing transcriptional activities of
hPRA and hPRB is depicted in Fig.
12A. We propose that hPRB is a
transcriptional activator of progesterone-responsive promoters,
since upon binding hormone, hPRB undergoes a conformational change which allows it to dissociate from corepressor proteins and
recruit coactivators. This productive interaction with the coactivators
allows the receptor to activate transcription from the promoters of
target genes. Conversely, under the same conditions, hPRA is
transcriptionally inactive because, unlike hPRB, it does not
effectively recruit coactivators to the promoters of target genes.
Thus, the inability of hPRA to activate target gene transcription does not appear to be related to its ability to associate with corepressors such as SMRT. However, our data reveal a central role for
SMRT in hPRA-mediated repression of ER
transcriptional activity. Thus, we propose that the hPRA-SMRT complex
blocks estrogen action by interfering with the assembly or function of
the ER
-coactivator complex.

View larger version (35K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 12.
Two distinct models are required to describe the
molecular mechanism of action of hPRA. (A) Transcriptional
activation. Based on the in vivo and the in vitro binding studies, we
propose that hPRA interacts more efficiently with corepressors and
less efficiently with coactivators than hPRB. In the presence of
hormone, hPRB, but not hPRA, undergoes a favorable
conformational change which allows it to displace corepressors (CoR)
and recruit coactivator proteins (CoA), thus allowing hPRB to
activate transcription from progesterone-responsive promoters. HD,
histone deacetylase; A, hPRA; B, hPRB. (B) Transrepression. Based on
our in vivo transrepression data, we propose that hPRA
transrepresses ER -mediated transcription by a transcriptional
interference mechanism. In this model, ER activates transcription by
recruiting a complex of coactivator proteins (ER CoA complex) to the
regulatory region of target genes. hPRA (A), but not hPRB
(B), targets and sequesters a member of the ER CoA
complex, thus preventing ER from activating transcription.
hPRA transrepression of ER transcriptional activity is further
enhanced by the recruitment by hPRA of the corepressor SMRT
(CoR).
|
|
Whereas the results of these studies explain why hPRB acts as a
strong transcriptional activator of progesterone-responsive promoters
and why hPRA is transcriptionally inactive in these contexts, it
remains to be determined how the hPRA-SMRT complex can transrepress
ER
transcriptional activity. We believe that agonist-bound hPRB
can interfere with ER
transcriptional activity by squelching a
required coactivator protein (i.e., p160 family of coactivators). It
does not appear, however, that hPRAs transrepression function
involves a direct competition between hPRA and ER
for coactivators. It may well be that hPRA inhibits the activity of a
cofactor required for ER
action by binding directly at a site distinct from the ER
-interacting site or indirectly by binding to
other proteins within the ER
-coactivator complex. Distinguishing between these possibilities is the subject of our current investigations.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank N. Weigel, J. D. Chen, D. D. Moore, B. O'Malley, M. Stallcup, and X.-F. Wang for providing plasmids and
reagents. We also acknowledge A. Vandongen, I. Tcherepanova-Freedman, C.-Y. Chang, X. Li, J. D. Norris
(Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology, DUMC, Durham,
N.C.), and James McNamara II (Department of Neurobiology, DUMC). Lori
Sherman (Department of Pathology, UCHSC) provided technical
assistance in the purification of the recombinant progesterone receptors.
This research was supported in part by National Institutes of Health
grants DK50495 (D.P.M.) and DK49030 (D.P.E.), NCI Cancer Center core
grant P30 CA46934 (D.P.E.), and predoctoral fellowships from USAMRMC
(P.H.G. and E.A.K.).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Pharmacology and Cancer Biology, Box 3813 Duke University Medical
Center, Durham, NC 27710. Phone: (919) 684-6035. Fax: (919)
681-7139. E-mail: mcdon016{at}acpub.duke.edu.
 |
REFERENCES |
| 1.
|
Alland, L.,
R. Muhle,
H. Hou, Jr.,
J. Potes,
L. Chin,
N. Schreiber-Agus, and R. A. DePinho.
1997.
Role for NCoR and histone deacetylase in Sin3-mediated transcriptional repression.
Nature
387:49-55[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 2.
|
Baichwal, V. R.,
A. Park, and R. Tjian.
1992.
The cell-type specific activator region of c-Jun juxtaposes constitutive and negatively regulated domains.
Genes Dev.
6:1493-1502[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 3.
|
Baichwal, V. R.,
A. Park, and R. Tjian.
1990.
Control of c-Jun activity by interaction of a cell-specific inhibitor with regulatory domain delta: differences between v- and c-Jun.
Cell
63:815-825[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 4.
|
Beato, M.,
G. Arnemann,
E. S. Chalepakis, and T. Willmann.
1987.
Gene regulation by steroid hormones.
J. Steroid Biochem.
27:9-14[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 5.
|
Berrevoets, C. A.,
P. Doesburg,
K. Steketee,
J. Trapman, and A. O. Brinkmann.
1998.
Functional interactions of the AF-2 activation domain core region of the human androgen receptor with the amino-terminal domain and with the transcriptional coactivator TIF2 (transcriptional intermediary factor2).
Mol. Endocrinol.
12:1172-1183[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 6.
|
Bocquel, M. T.,
V. Kumar,
C. Stricker,
P. Chambon, and H. Gronemeyer.
1989.
The contribution of the N- and C-terminal regions of steroid receptors to activation of transcription is both receptor and cell specific.
Nucleic Acids Res.
17:2581-2595[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 7.
|
Boonyaratanakornkit, V.,
V. Melvin,
P. Prendergast,
M. Altmann,
L. Ronfani,
M. E. Bianchi,
L. Taraseviciene,
S. K. Nordeen,
E. A. Allegretto, and D. P. Edwards.
1998.
High-mobility-group chromatin proteins 1 and 2 functionally interact with steroid hormone receptors to enhance their DNA binding in vitro and transcriptional activity in mammalian cells.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
18:4471-4487[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 8.
|
Brown, H. J.,
A. Sutherland,
A. Cook,
A. J. Bannister, and T. Kouzarides.
1995.
An inhibitor domain in c-Fos regulates activation domains containing the HOB1 motif.
EMBO J.
14:124-131[Medline].
|
| 9.
|
Chalbous, D., and F. Galtier.
1994.
Differential effect of forms A and B of human progesterone receptor estradiol-dependent transcription.
J. Biol. Chem.
269:23007-23012[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 10.
|
Chang, C.-Y.,
J. D. Norris,
H. Gron,
L. A. Paige,
P. T. Hamilton,
D. J. Kenan,
D. Fowlkes, and D. P. McDonnell.
1999.
Dissection of the LXXLL nuclear receptor-coactivator interaction motif using combinatorial peptide libraries: discovery of peptide antagonists of estrogen receptors and .
Mol. Cell. Biol.
19:8226-8239[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 11.
|
Christensen, K.,
P. A. Estes,
S. A. Onate,
C. A. Beck,
A. DeMarzo,
M. Altmann,
B. A. Lieberman,
J. St. John,
S. K. Nordeen, and D. P. Edwards.
1991.
Characterization and functional properties of the A and B forms of human progesterone receptors synthesized in a baculovirus system.
Mol. Endocrinol.
5:1755-1770[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 12.
|
Clemm, D. L.,
L. Sherman,
V. Boonyaratanakornkit,
W. T. Schrader,
N. L. Weigel, and D. P. Edwards.
2000.
Differential hormone-dependent phosphorylation of progesterone receptor A and B forms revealed by a phosphoserine site-specific monoclonal antibody.
Mol. Endocrinol.
14:52-65[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 13.
|
Dana, S. L.,
P. A. Hoener,
D. A. Wheeler,
C. B. Lawrence, and D. P. McDonnell.
1994.
Novel estrogen response elements identified by genetic selection in yeast are differentially responsive to estrogens and antiestrogens in mammalian cells.
Mol. Endocrinol.
8:1193-1207[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 14.
|
Doesburg, P.,
C. W. Kuil,
C. A. Berrevoets,
K. Steketee,
P. W. Faber,
E. Mulder,
A. O. Brinkmann, and J. Trapman.
1997.
Functional in vivo interaction between the amino-terminal, transactivation domain and the ligand binding domain of the androgen receptor.
Biochemistry
36:1052-1064[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 15.
|
Dubendorff, J. W.,
L. J. Whittaker,
J. T. Eltman, and J. S. Lipsick.
1992.
Carboxyl-terminal elements of cMyb negatively regulate transcriptional activation in cis and in trans.
Genes Dev.
6:2524-2535[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 16.
|
Evans, R. M.
1988.
The steroid and thyroid hormone receptor superfamily.
Science
240:889-895[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 17.
|
Friedl, E. M., and P. Matthias.
1995.
Mapping of the transcriptional repression domain of the lymphoid specific transcription factor oct-2A.
Eur. J. Biochem.
234:308-316[Medline].
|
| 18.
|
Giangrande, P. H.,
G. Pollio, and D. P. McDonnell.
1997.
Mapping and characterization of the functional domains responsible for the differential activity of the A and B isoforms of the human progesterone receptor.
J. Biol. Chem.
272:32889-32900[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 19.
|
Glass, C. K.,
D. W. Rose, and M. G. Rosenfeld.
1997.
Nuclear receptor coactivators.
Curr. Opin. Cell Biol.
9:222-232[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 20.
|
Gronemeyer, H.
1991.
Transcription activation by estrogen and progesterone receptors.
Annu. Rev. Genet.
25:89-123[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 21.
|
Harding, H. P.,
G. B. Atkins,
A. B. Jaffe,
W. J. Seo, and M. A. Lazar.
1997.
Transcriptional activation and repression by ROR and orphan nuclear receptor required for cerebellar development.
Mol. Endocrinol.
11:1737-1746[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 22.
|
Heinzel, T.,
R. M. Lavinski,
T. M. Mullen,
M. Soderstrom,
C. D. Laherty,
J. Torchia,
W. M. Yang,
G. Brard,
S. D. Ngo,
G. R. Davie,
E. Seto,
R. N. Eisenman,
R. D. W.,
C. K. Glass, and M. G. Rosenfeld.
1997.
A complex containing NCoR, mSin3, and histone deacetylase mediates transcriptional repression.
Nature
387:43-48[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 23.
|
Horlein, A. J.,
A. M. Naar,
T. Heinzel,
J. Torchia,
B. Gloss,
R. Kurokawa,
A. Ryan,
Y. Kamei,
M. Soderstrom,
C. K. Glass, et al.
1995.
Ligand-independent repression by the thyroid hormone receptor mediated by a nuclear receptor co-repressor.
Nature
377:397-404[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 24.
|
Horwitz, K. B.,
T. A. Jackson,
D. L. Bain,
J. K. Richer,
G. S. Takimoto, and L. Tung.
1996.
Nuclear receptor coactivators and corepressors.
Mol. Endocrinol.
10:1167-1177[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 25.
|
Hovland, A. R.,
R. L. Powel,
G. S. Takimoto,
L. Tung, and K. B. Horwitz.
1998.
An N-terminal inhibitory function, IF, suppresses transcription by the A-isoform, but not the B-isoform, of human progesterone receptors.
J. Biol. Chem.
273:5455-5460[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 26.
|
Huse, B.,
S. B. Verca,
P. Matthey, and S. Rusconi.
1998.
Definition of a negative modulation domain in the human progesterone receptor.
Mol. Endocrinol.
12:1334-1342[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 27.
|
Ikonen, T.,
J. J. Palvimo, and O. A. Janne.
1997.
Interaction between the amino- and carboxyl-terminal regions of the rat androgen receptor modulates transcriptional activity and is influenced by nuclear receptor coactivators.
J. Biol. Chem.
272:29821-29828[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 28.
|
Ing, N.,
J. Beekman,
S. Tsai,
M.-J. Tsai, and B. O'Malley.
1992.
Members of the steroid hormone receptor superfamily interact with TFIIB (S300-II).
J. Biol. Chem.
267:17617-17623[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 29.
|
Jenster, G.,
T. E. Spencer,
M. M. Burcin,
S. Y. Tsai,
M.-J. Tsai, and B. W. O'Malley.
1997.
Steroid receptor induction of gene transcription: a two step model.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
94:7879-7884[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 30.
|
Kastner, P.,
A. Krust,
B. Turcotte,
U. Stropp,
L. Tora,
H. Gronemeyer, and P. Chambon.
1990.
Two distinct estrogen-regulated promoters generate transcripts encoding the two functionally different human progesterone receptor forms A and B.
EMBO J.
9:1603-1614[Medline].
|
| 31.
|
Kraus, W. L.,
K. E. Weis, and B. S. Katzenellenbogen.
1995.
Inhibitory cross-talk between steroid hormone receptors: differential targeting of estrogen receptor in the repression of its transcriptional activity by agonist- and antagonist-occupied progestin receptors.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
15:1847-1857[Abstract].
|
| 32.
|
Leonhardt, S. A.,
M. Altmann, and D. P. Edwards.
1998.
Agonist and antagonists induce homodimerization and mixed ligand heterodimerization of human progesterone receptors in vivo by a mammalian two-hybrid assay.
Mol. Endocrinol.
12:1914-1930[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 33.
|
Lessey, B. A.,
P. S. Alexander, and K. B. Horwitz.
1983.
The subunit characterization of human breast cancer progesterone receptors: characterization by chromatography and photoaffinity labelling.
Endocrinology
112:1267-1274[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 34.
|
Li, X. Y., and M. R. Green.
1996.
Intracmolecular inhibition of activating transcription factor-2 function by its DNA-binding domain.
Genes Dev.
10:517-527[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 35.
|
MacGregor, G. R., and C. T. Caskey.
1989.
Construction of plasmids that express E. coli -galactosidase in mammalian cells.
Nucleic Acids Res.
17:2365[Free Full Text].
|
| 36.
|
McDonnell, D. P.,
D. L. Clemm,
T. Hermann,
M. E. Goldman, and J. W. Pike.
1995.
Analysis of estrogen receptor function in vitro reveals three distinct classes of antiestrogens.
Mol. Endocrinol.
9:659-669[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 37.
|
McDonnell, D. P.,
D. L. Clemm, and M. O. Imhof.
1994.
Definition of the cellular mechanisms which distinguish between hormone and antihormone activated steroid receptors.
Semin. Cancer Biol.
5:327-336[Medline].
|
| 38.
|
McDonnell, D. P., and M. E. Goldman.
1994.
RU486 exerts antiestrogenic activities through a novel progesterone receptor A form-mediated mechanism.
J. Biol. Chem.
269:11945-11949[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 39.
|
McDonnell, D. P.,
E. Vegeto, and B. W. O'Malley.
1992.
Identification of a negative regulatory function for steroid receptors.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
89:10563-10567[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 40.
|
Meyer, M.-E.,
C. Quirin-Stricker,
T. Lerouge,
M.-T. Bocquel, and H. Gronemeyer.
1992.
A limiting factor mediates the differential activation of promoters by the human progesterone receptor isoforms.
J. Biol. Chem.
267:10882-10887[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 41.
|
Nagy, L.,
H. Y. Kao,
D. Chakravarti,
R. J. Lin,
C. A. Hassig,
D. E. Ayer,
S. L. Schreiber, and R. M. Evans.
1997.
Nuclear receptor repression mediated by a complex containing SMRT, mSin3A, and histone deacetylase.
Cell
89:373-380[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 42.
|
Norris, J.,
D. Fan,
C. Aleman,
J. R. Marks,
P. A. Futreal,
R. W. Wiseman,
J. D. Iglehart,
P. L. Deininger, and D. P. McDonnell.
1995.
Identification of a new subclass of Alu DNA repeats which can function as estrogen receptor-dependent transcriptional enhancers.
J. Biol. Chem.
270:22777-22782[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 43.
|
Norris, J. D.,
L. A. Paige,
D. J. Christensen,
C.-Y. Chang,
M. R. Huacani,
D. Fan,
P. T. Hamilton,
D. M. Fowlkes, and D. P. McDonnell.
1999.
Peptide antagonists of the human estrogen receptor.
Science
285:744-746[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 44.
|
Onate, S. A.,
V. Boonyaratanakonrnkit,
T. E. Spencer,
S. Y. Tsai,
M. J. Tsai,
D. P. Edwards, and B. W. O'Malley.
1998.
The steroid receptor coactivator-1 contains multiple receptor interacting and activation domains that cooperatively enhance the activation function 1 (AF1) and AF2 domains of the steroid receptors.
J. Biol. Chem.
273:12101-12108[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 45.
|
Onate, S. A.,
S. Tsai,
M.-J. Tsai, and B. W. O'Malley.
1995.
Sequence and characterization of a coactivator for the steroid hormone receptor superfamily.
Science
270:1354-1357[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 46.
|
Pham, T. A.,
Y. P. Hwung,
D. Santiso-Mere,
D. P. McDonnell, and B. W. O'Malley.
1992.
Ligand-dependent and -independent function of the transactivation regions of the human estrogen receptor in yeast.
Mol. Endocrinol.
6:1043-1050[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 47.
|
Sartorius, C. A.,
M. Y. Melville,
A. R. Hovland,
L. Tung,
G. S. Takimoto, and K. B. Horwitz.
1994.
A third transactivation function (AF3) of human progesterone receptors located in the unique N-terminal segment of the B-isoform.
Mol. Endocrinol.
8:1347-1360[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 48.
|
Seol, W.,
M. J. Mahon,
Y.-K. Lee, and D. D. Moore.
1996.
Two receptor interacting domains in the nuclear hormone receptor corepressor RIP13/NCoR.
Mol. Endocrinol.
10:1646-1655[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 49.
|
Shibata, H.,
T. E. Spencer,
S. A. Onate,
G. Jenster,
S. Y. Tsai,
M. J. Tsai, and B. W. O'Malley.
1997.
Role of co-activators and co-repressors in the mechanism of steroid/thyroid receptor action.
Recent Prog. Horm. Res.
52:141-164.
|
| 50.
|
Smith, C. L.,
Z. Nawaz, and B. W. O'Malley.
1997.
Coactivator and corepressor regulation of the agonist/antagonist activity of the mixed antiestrogen, 4-hydroxytamoxifen.
Mol. Endocrinol.
11:657-666[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 51.
|
Smith, C. L.,
S. A. Onate,
M. J. Tsai, and B. W. O'Malley.
1996.
CREB binding protein acts synergistically with steroid receptor coactivator-1 to enhance steroid receptor-dependent transcription.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
93:8884-8888[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 52.
|
Smith, D. F.,
L. E. Faber, and D. O. Toft.
1990.
Purification of unactivated progesterone receptor and identification of novel receptor-associated proteins.
J. Biol. Chem.
265:3996-4003[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 53.
|
Tasset, D.,
L. Tora,
C. Fromental,
E. Scheer, and P. Chambon.
1990.
Distinct classes of transcriptional activating domains function by different mechanisms.
Cell
62:1177-1187[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 54.
|
Tetel, M. J.,
P. H. Giangrande,
S. A. Leonhardt,
D. P. McDonnell, and D. P. Edwards.
1999.
Hormone dependent interaction between the amino- and carboxyl-terminal domains of the progesterone receptor in vitro and in vivo.
Mol. Endocrinol.
13:910-924[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 55.
|
Torchia, J.,
C. Glass, and M. G. Rosenfeld.
1998.
Co-activators and co-repressors in the integration of transcriptional responses.
Curr. Opin. Cell Biol.
10:373-383[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 56.
|
Tung, L.,
M. K. Mohamed,
J. P. Hoeffler,
G. S. Takimoto, and K. B. Horwitz.
1993.
Antagonist-occupied human progesterone B-receptors activate transcription without binding to progesterone response elements and are dominantly inhibited by A-receptors.
Mol. Endocrinol.
7:1256-1265[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 57.
|
Tzukerman, M. T.,
A. Esty,
D. Santiso-Mere,
P. Danielian,
M. G. Parker,
R. B. Stein,
J. W. Pike, and D. P. McDonnell.
1994.
Human estrogen receptor transactivational capacity is determined by both cellular and promoter context and mediated by two functionally distinct intramolecular regions.
Mol. Endocrinol.
8:21-30[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 58.
|
Vegeto, E.,
M. M. Shahbaz,
D. X. Wen,
M. E. Goldman,
B. W. O'Malley, and D. P. McDonnell.
1993.
Human progesterone receptor A form is a cell- and promoter-specific repressor of human progesterone receptor B function.
Mol. Endocrinol.
7:1244-1255[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 59.
|
Voegel, J. J.,
M. J. Heine,
C. Zechel,
P. Chambon, and H. Gronemeyer.
1996.
TIF2, a 160 kDa transcriptional mediator for the ligand-dependent activation function AF-2 of nuclear receptors.
EMBO J.
15:3667-3675[Medline].
|
| 60.
|
Wagner, B. L.,
J. D. Norris,
T. A. Knotts,
N. L. Weigel, and D. P. McDonnell.
1998.
The nuclear corepressors NCoR and SMRT are key regulators of both ligand- and 8-bromo-cyclic AMP-dependent transcriptional activity of the human progesterone receptor.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
18:1369-1378[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 61.
|
Wen, D. X.,
Y. F. Xu,
D. E. Mais,
M. E. Goldman, and D. P. McDonnell.
1994.
The A and B isoforms of the human progesterone receptor operate through distinct signaling pathways within target cells.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
14:8356-8364[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 62.
|
Zamir, I.,
H. P. Harding,
G. B. Atkins,
A. Horlein,
C. K. Glass,
M. G. Rosenfeld, and M. A. Lazar.
1996.
A nuclear hormone receptor corepressor mediates transcriptional silencing by receptors with distinct repression domains.
Mol. Cell. Biol.
16:5458-5465[Abstract].
|
Molecular and Cellular Biology, May 2000, p. 3102-3115, Vol. 20, No. 9
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Mendelson, C. R.
(2009). Minireview: Fetal-Maternal Hormonal Signaling in Pregnancy and Labor. Mol. Endocrinol.
23: 947-954
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Abdel-Hafiz, H., Dudevoir, M. L., Horwitz, K. B.
(2009). Mechanisms Underlying the Control of Progesterone Receptor Transcriptional Activity by SUMOylation. J. Biol. Chem.
284: 9099-9108
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Merlino, A., Welsh, T., Erdonmez, T., Madsen, G., Zakar, T., Smith, R., Mercer, B., Mesiano, S.
(2009). Nuclear Progesterone Receptor Expression in the Human Fetal Membranes and Decidua at Term Before and After Labor. Reproductive Sciences
16: 357-363
[Abstract]
-
Gellersen, B., Fernandes, M.S., Brosens, J.J.
(2009). Non-genomic progesterone actions in female reproduction. Hum Reprod Update
15: 119-138
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Molenda-Figueira, H. A., Murphy, S. D., Shea, K. L., Siegal, N. K., Zhao, Y., Chadwick, J. G. Jr., Denner, L. A., Tetel, M. J.
(2008). Steroid Receptor Coactivator-1 from Brain Physically Interacts Differentially with Steroid Receptor Subtypes. Endocrinology
149: 5272-5279
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Johnson, T. A., Elbi, C., Parekh, B. S., Hager, G. L., John, S.
(2008). Chromatin Remodeling Complexes Interact Dynamically with a Glucocorticoid Receptor-regulated Promoter. Mol. Biol. Cell
19: 3308-3322
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Mani, S.
(2008). Progestin Receptor Subtypes in the Brain: The Known and the Unknown. Endocrinology
149: 2750-2756
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Zeng, Z., Velarde, M. C., Simmen, F. A., Simmen, R. C.M.
(2008). Delayed Parturition and Altered Myometrial Progesterone Receptor Isoform A Expression in Mice Null for Kruppel-Like Factor 9. Biol. Reprod.
78: 1029-1037
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Salih, S. M., Salama, S. A., Jamaluddin, M., Fadl, A. A., Blok, L. J., Burger, C. W., Nagamani, M., Al-Hendy, A.
(2008). Progesterone-Mediated Regulation of Catechol-O-Methyl Transferase Expression in Endometrial Cancer Cells. Reproductive Sciences
15: 210-220
[Abstract]
-
Rebbeck, T. R., Troxel, A. B., Norman, S., Bunin, G., DeMichele, A., Schinnar, R., Berlin, J. A., Strom, B. L.
(2007). Pharmacogenetic Modulation of Combined Hormone Replacement Therapy by Progesterone-Metabolism Genotypes in Postmenopausal Breast Cancer Risk. Am J Epidemiol
166: 1392-1399
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Brayman, M. J., Dharmaraj, N., Lagow, E., Carson, D. D.
(2007). MUC1 Expression Is Repressed by Protein Inhibitor of Activated Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription-y. Mol. Endocrinol.
21: 2725-2737
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Krusche, C. A., Vloet, A. J., Classen-Linke, I., von Rango, U., Beier, H. M., Alfer, J.
(2007). Class I histone deacetylase expression in the human cyclic endometrium and endometrial adenocarcinomas. Hum Reprod
22: 2956-2966
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
McGowan, E. M., Russell, A. J., Boonyaratanakornkit, V., Saunders, D. N., Lehrbach, G. M., Sergio, C. M., Musgrove, E. A., Edwards, D. P., Sutherland, R. L.
(2007). Progestins Reinitiate Cell Cycle Progression in Antiestrogen-Arrested Breast Cancer Cells through the B-Isoform of Progesterone Receptor. Cancer Res.
67: 8942-8951
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Newcomb, P. A., Zheng, Y., Chia, V. M., Morimoto, L. M., Doria-Rose, V. P., Templeton, A., Thibodeau, S. N., Potter, J. D.
(2007). Estrogen Plus Progestin Use, Microsatellite Instability, and the Risk of Colorectal Cancer in Women. Cancer Res.
67: 7534-7539
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Kariagina, A., Aupperlee, M. D., Haslam, S. Z.
(2007). Progesterone Receptor Isoforms and Proliferation in the Rat Mammary Gland during Development. Endocrinology
148: 2723-2736
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Merlino, A. A., Welsh, T. N., Tan, H., Yi, L. J., Cannon, V., Mercer, B. M., Mesiano, S.
(2007). Nuclear Progesterone Receptors in the Human Pregnancy Myometrium: Evidence that Parturition Involves Functional Progesterone Withdrawal Mediated by Increased Expression of Progesterone Receptor-A. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab.
92: 1927-1933
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Madsen, G., MacIntyre, D. A., Mesiano, S., Smith, R.
(2007). Progesterone Receptor or Cytoskeletal Protein?. Reproductive Sciences
14: 217-222
[Abstract]
-
Connaghan-Jones, K. D., Heneghan, A. F., Miura, M. T., Bain, D. L.
(2007). Thermodynamic analysis of progesterone receptor-promoter interactions reveals a molecular model for isoform-specific function. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
104: 2187-2192
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Sasaki, H., Ohara, N., Xu, Q., Wang, J., DeManno, D. A., Chwalisz, K., Yoshida, S., Maruo, T.
(2007). A Novel Selective Progesterone Receptor Modulator Asoprisnil Activates Tumor Necrosis Factor-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand (TRAIL)-Mediated Signaling Pathway in Cultured Human Uterine Leiomyoma Cells in the Absence of Comparable Effects on Myometrial Cells. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab.
92: 616-623
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Smith, R.
(2007). Parturition. NEJM
356: 271-283
[Full Text]
-
White, M. M, Sheffer, I., Teeter, J., Apostolakis, E. M.
(2007). Hypothalamic progesterone receptor-A mediates gonadotropin surges, self priming and receptivity in estrogen-primed female mice. J Mol Endocrinol
38: 35-50
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
van Kaam, K.J.A.F., Romano, A., Schouten, J.P., Dunselman, G.A.J., Groothuis, P.G.
(2007). Progesterone receptor polymorphism +331G/A is associated with a decreased risk of deep infiltrating endometriosis. Hum Reprod
22: 129-135
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Lu, N. Z., Wardell, S. E., Burnstein, K. L., Defranco, D., Fuller, P. J., Giguere, V., Hochberg, R. B., McKay, L., Renoir, J.-M., Weigel, N. L., Wilson, E. M., McDonnell, D. P., Cidlowski, J. A.
(2006). International Union of Pharmacology. LXV. The Pharmacology and Classification of the Nuclear Receptor Superfamily: Glucocorticoid, Mineralocorticoid, Progesterone, and Androgen Receptors. Pharmacol. Rev.
58: 782-797
[Full Text]
-
Tung, L., Abdel-Hafiz, H., Shen, T., Harvell, D. M. E., Nitao, L. K., Richer, J. K., Sartorius, C. A., Takimoto, G. S., Horwitz, K. B.
(2006). Progesterone Receptors (PR)-B and -A Regulate Transcription by Different Mechanisms: AF-3 Exerts Regulatory Control over Coactivator Binding to PR-B. Mol. Endocrinol.
20: 2656-2670
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Yang, Z., Wolf, I. M., Chen, H., Periyasamy, S., Chen, Z., Yong, W., Shi, S., Zhao, W., Xu, J., Srivastava, A., Sanchez, E. R., Shou, W.
(2006). FK506-Binding Protein 52 Is Essential to Uterine Reproductive Physiology Controlled by the Progesterone Receptor A Isoform. Mol. Endocrinol.
20: 2682-2694
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Brayman, M. J., Julian, J., Mulac-Jericevic, B., Conneely, O. M., Edwards, D. P., Carson, D. D.
(2006). Progesterone Receptor Isoforms A and B Differentially Regulate MUC1 Expression in Uterine Epithelial Cells. Mol. Endocrinol.
20: 2278-2291
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Turgeon, J. L, Waring, D. W
(2006). Differential expression and regulation of progesterone receptor isoforms in rat and mouse pituitary cells and L{beta}T2 gonadotropes.. J Endocrinol
190: 837-846
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Georgiakaki, M., Chabbert-Buffet, N., Dasen, B., Meduri, G., Wenk, S., Rajhi, L., Amazit, L., Chauchereau, A., Burger, C. W., Blok, L. J., Milgrom, E., Lombes, M., Guiochon-Mantel, A., Loosfelt, H.
(2006). Ligand-Controlled Interaction of Histone Acetyltransferase Binding to ORC-1 (HBO1) with the N-Terminal Transactivating Domain of Progesterone Receptor Induces Steroid Receptor Coactivator 1-Dependent Coactivation of Transcription. Mol. Endocrinol.
20: 2122-2140
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Mani, S. K., Reyna, A. M., Chen, J. Z., Mulac-Jericevic, B., Conneely, O. M.
(2006). Differential Response of Progesterone Receptor Isoforms in Hormone-Dependent and -Independent Facilitation of Female Sexual Receptivity. Mol. Endocrinol.
20: 1322-1332
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Condon, J. C., Hardy, D. B., Kovaric, K., Mendelson, C. R.
(2006). Up-Regulation of the Progesterone Receptor (PR)-C Isoform in Laboring Myometrium by Activation of Nuclear Factor-{kappa}B May Contribute to the Onset of Labor through Inhibition of PR Function. Mol. Endocrinol.
20: 764-775
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Huggins, G. S., Wong, J. Y.Y., Hankinson, S. E., De Vivo, I.
(2006). GATA5 Activation of the Progesterone Receptor Gene Promoter in Breast Cancer Cells Is Influenced by the +331G/A Polymorphism. Cancer Res.
66: 1384-1390
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Graham, J. D., Yager, M. L., Hill, H. D., Byth, K., O'Neill, G. M., Clarke, C. L.
(2005). Altered Progesterone Receptor Isoform Expression Remodels Progestin Responsiveness of Breast Cancer Cells. Mol. Endocrinol.
19: 2713-2735
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Saitoh, M., Ohmichi, M., Takahashi, K., Kawagoe, J., Ohta, T., Doshida, M., Takahashi, T., Igarashi, H., Mori-Abe, A., Du, B., Tsutsumi, S., Kurachi, H.
(2005). Medroxyprogesterone Acetate Induces Cell Proliferation through Up-Regulation of Cyclin D1 Expression via Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase/Akt/Nuclear Factor-{kappa}B Cascade in Human Breast Cancer Cells. Endocrinology
146: 4917-4925
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Wang, D., Simons, S. S. Jr.
(2005). Corepressor Binding to Progesterone and Glucocorticoid Receptors Involves the Activation Function-1 Domain and Is Inhibited by Molybdate. Mol. Endocrinol.
19: 1483-1500
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Schwartz, P. E.
(2005). Progesterone Isoforms and Endometrial Cancer. Reproductive Sciences
12: 219-221
-
Smid-Koopman, E., Kuhne, L. C. M., Hanekamp, E. E., Gielen, S. C.J.P., De Ruiter, P. E., Grootegoed, J. A., Helmerhorst, T. J.M., Burger, C. W., Brinkmann, A. O., Huikeshoven, F. J., Blok, L. J.
(2005). Progesterone-Induced Inhibition of Growth and Differential Regulation of Gene Expression in PRA- and/or PRB-Expressing Endometrial Cancer Cell Lines. Reproductive Sciences
12: 285-292
[Abstract]
-
Goldman, S., Weiss, A., Almalah, I., Shalev, E.
(2005). Progesterone receptor expression in human decidua and fetal membranes before and after contractions: possible mechanism for functional progesterone withdrawal. Mol Hum Reprod
11: 269-277
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Rayasam, G. V., Elbi, C., Walker, D. A., Wolford, R., Fletcher, T. M., Edwards, D. P., Hager, G. L.
(2005). Ligand-Specific Dynamics of the Progesterone Receptor in Living Cells and during Chromatin Remodeling In Vitro. Mol. Cell. Biol.
25: 2406-2418
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Berchuck, A., Schildkraut, J. M., Wenham, R. M., Calingaert, B., Ali, S., Henriott, A., Halabi, S., Rodriguez, G. C., Gertig, D., Purdie, D. M., Kelemen, L., Spurdle, A. B., Marks, J., Chenevix-Trench, G.
(2004). Progesterone Receptor Promoter +331A Polymorphism is Associated with a Reduced Risk of Endometrioid and Clear Cell Ovarian Cancers. Cancer Epidemiol. Biomarkers Prev.
13: 2141-2147
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Mesiano, S.
(2004). Myometrial Progesterone responsiveness and the Control of Human Parturition. Reproductive Sciences
11: 193-202
[Abstract]
-
Modugno, F.
(2004). Ovarian Cancer and Polymorphisms in the Androgen and Progesterone Receptor Genes: A HuGE Review. Am J Epidemiol
159: 319-335
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Smith, C. L., O'Malley, B. W.
(2004). Coregulator Function: A Key to Understanding Tissue Specificity of Selective Receptor Modulators. Endocr. Rev.
25: 45-71
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Molenda, H. A., Kilts, C. P., Allen, R. L., Tetel, M. J.
(2003). Nuclear Receptor Coactivator Function in Reproductive Physiology and Behavior. Biol. Reprod.
69: 1449-1457
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Li, X., O'Malley, B. W.
(2003). Unfolding the Action of Progesterone Receptors. J. Biol. Chem.
278: 39261-39264
[Full Text]
-
Hanekamp, E. E., Gielen, S. C. J. P., Smid-Koopman, E., Kuhne, L. C. M., de Ruiter, P. E., Chadha-Ajwani, S., Brinkmann, A. O., Grootegoed, J. A., Burger, C. W., Huikeshoven, F. J., Blok, L. J.
(2003). Consequences of Loss of Progesterone Receptor Expression in Development of Invasive Endometrial Cancer. Clin. Cancer Res.
9: 4190-4199
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
De Vivo, I., Hankinson, S. E., Colditz, G. A., Hunter, D. J.
(2003). A Functional Polymorphism in the Progesterone Receptor Gene Is Associated with an Increase in Breast Cancer Risk. Cancer Res.
63: 5236-5238
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Mulac-Jericevic, B., Lydon, J. P., DeMayo, F. J., Conneely, O. M.
(2003). Defective mammary gland morphogenesis in mice lacking the progesterone receptor B isoform. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
100: 9744-9749
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Zhang, X.-L., Zhang, D., Michel, F. J., Blum, J. L., Simmen, F. A., Simmen, R. C. M.
(2003). Selective Interactions of Kruppel-like Factor 9/Basic Transcription Element-binding Protein with Progesterone Receptor Isoforms A and B Determine Transcriptional Activity of Progesterone-responsive Genes in Endometrial Epithelial Cells. J. Biol. Chem.
278: 21474-21482
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Giangrande, P. H., Hallstrom, T. C., Tunyaplin, C., Calame, K., Nevins, J. R.
(2003). Identification of E-Box Factor TFE3 as a Functional Partner for the E2F3 Transcription Factor. Mol. Cell. Biol.
23: 3707-3720
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Cheskis, B. J., McKenna, N. J., Wong, C.-W., Wong, J., Komm, B., Lyttle, C. R., O'Malley, B. W.
(2003). Hierarchical Affinities and a Bipartite Interaction Model for Estrogen Receptor Isoforms and Full-length Steroid Receptor Coactivator (SRC/p160) Family Members. J. Biol. Chem.
278: 13271-13277
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Yao, M. W. M., Lim, H., Schust, D. J., Choe, S. E., Farago, A., Ding, Y., Michaud, S., Church, G. M., Maas, R. L.
(2003). Gene Expression Profiling Reveals Progesterone-Mediated Cell Cycle and Immunoregulatory Roles of Hoxa-10 in the Preimplantation Uterus. Mol. Endocrinol.
17: 610-627
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Ozisik, G., Mantovani, G., Achermann, J. C., Persani, L., Spada, A., Weiss, J., Beck-Peccoz, P., Jameson, J. L.
(2003). An Alternate Translation Initiation Site Circumvents an Amino-Terminal DAX1 Nonsense Mutation Leading to a Mild Form of X-Linked Adrenal Hypoplasia Congenita. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab.
88: 417-423
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Leonhardt, S. A., Edwards, D. P.
(2002). Mechanism of Action of Progesterone Antagonists. Exp. Biol. Med.
227: 969-980
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Vasudevan, N., Ogawa, S., Pfaff, D.
(2002). Estrogen and Thyroid Hormone Receptor Interactions: Physiological Flexibility by Molecular Specificity. Physiol. Rev.
82: 923-944
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
De Vivo, I., Huggins, G. S., Hankinson, S. E., Lescault, P. J., Boezen, M., Colditz, G. A., Hunter, D. J.
(2002). A functional polymorphism in the promoter of the progesterone receptor gene associated with endometrial cancer risk. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
99: 12263-12268
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Abdel-Hafiz, H., Takimoto, G. S., Tung, L., Horwitz, K. B.
(2002). The Inhibitory Function in Human Progesterone Receptor N Termini Binds SUMO-1 Protein to Regulate Autoinhibition and Transrepression. J. Biol. Chem.
277: 33950-33956
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Wardell, S. E., Boonyaratanakornkit, V., Adelman, J. S., Aronheim, A., Edwards, D. P.
(2002). Jun Dimerization Protein 2 Functions as a Progesterone Receptor N-Terminal Domain Coactivator. Mol. Cell. Biol.
22: 5451-5466
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Sathya, G., Jansen, M. S., Nagel, S. C., Cook, C. E., MCDonnell, D. P.
(2002). Identification and Characterization of Novel Estrogen Receptor-{beta}-Sparing Antiprogestins. Endocrinology
143: 3071-3082
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Jacobsen, B. M., Richer, J. K., Schittone, S. A., Horwitz, K. B.
(2002). New Human Breast Cancer Cells to Study Progesterone Receptor Isoform Ratio Effects and Ligand-independent Gene Regulation. J. Biol. Chem.
277: 27793-27800
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Mesiano, S., Chan, E.-C., Fitter, J. T., Kwek, K., Yeo, G., Smith, R.
(2002). Progesterone Withdrawal and Estrogen Activation in Human Parturition Are Coordinated by Progesterone Receptor A Expression in the Myometrium. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab.
87: 2924-2930
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Zhang, D., Zhang, X.-L., Michel, F. J., Blum, J. L., Simmen, F. A., Simmen, R. C. M.
(2002). Direct Interaction of the Kruppel-like Family (KLF) Member, BTEB1, and PR Mediates Progesterone-Responsive Gene Expression in Endometrial Epithelial Cells. Endocrinology
143: 62-73
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Christian, M., Pohnke, Y., Kempf, R., Gellersen, B., Brosens, J. J.
(2002). Functional Association of PR and CCAAT/Enhancer-Binding Protein {beta} Isoforms: Promoter-Dependent Cooperation between PR-B and Liver-Enriched Inhibitory Protein, or Liver-Enriched Activatory Protein and PR-A in Human Endometrial Stromal Cells. Mol. Endocrinol.
16: 141-154
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Conneely, O. M., Mulac-Jericevic, B., DeMayo, F., Lydon, J. P., O'Malley, B. W.
(2002). Reproductive Functions of Progesterone Receptors. Recent Prog Horm Res
57: 339-355
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Fannon, S. A., Vidaver, R. M., Marts, S. A.
(2001). Genome and Hormones: Gender Differences in Physiology: Historical Perspectives: An abridged history of sex steroid hormone receptor action. J. Appl. Physiol.
91: 1854-1859
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Mote, P A, Johnston, J F, Manninen, T, Tuohimaa, P, Clarke, C L
(2001). Detection of progesterone receptor forms A and B by immunohistochemical analysis. J. Clin. Pathol.
54: 624-630
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Turgeon, J. L., Waring, D. W.
(2001). Luteinizing Hormone Secretion from Wild-Type and Progesterone Receptor Knockout Mouse Anterior Pituitary Cells. Endocrinology
142: 3108-3115
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Conneely, O. M.
(2001). Perspective: Female Steroid Hormone Action. Endocrinology
142: 2194-2199
[Full Text]
-
Knotts, T. A., Orkiszewski, R. S., Cook, R. G., Edwards, D. P., Weigel, N. L.
(2001). Identification of a Phosphorylation Site in the Hinge Region of the Human Progesterone Receptor and Additional Amino-terminal Phosphorylation Sites. J. Biol. Chem.
276: 8475-8483
[Abstract]
[Full Text]