The Small Heterodimer Partner Interacts with the Pregnane X Receptor and Represses Its Transcriptional Activity
Author(s) -
Jean Claude Ourlin,
Frédèric Lasserre,
Thierry Pineau,
J Fabré,
António Sá Cunha,
Patrick Maurel,
MarieJosé Vilarem,
JeanMarc Pascussi
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
molecular endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9917
pISSN - 0888-8809
DOI - 10.1210/me.2002-0383
Subject(s) - pregnane x receptor , small heterodimer partner , farnesoid x receptor , biology , nuclear receptor , chenodeoxycholic acid , g protein coupled bile acid receptor , cyp8b1 , transactivation , bile acid , corepressor , cholesterol 7 alpha hydroxylase , biochemistry , constitutive androstane receptor , cholic acid , cyp3a , microbiology and biotechnology , transcription factor , cytochrome p450 , enzyme , gene
SHP (small heterodimer partner, NR1I0) is an atypical orphan member of the nuclear receptor subfamily in that it lacks a DNA-binding domain. It is mostly expressed in the liver, where it binds to and inhibits the function of nuclear receptors. SHP is up-regulated by primary bile acids, through the activation of their receptor farnesoid X receptor, leading to the repression of cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase (CYP7alpha) expression, the rate-limiting enzyme in bile acid production from cholesterol. PXR (pregnane X receptor, NR1I2) is a broad-specificity sensor that recognizes a wide variety of synthetic drugs as well as endogenous compounds such as bile acid precursors. Upon activation, PXR induces CYP3A and inhibits CYP7alpha, suggesting that PXR can act on both bile acid synthesis and elimination. Indeed, CYP7alpha and CYP3A are involved in biochemical pathways leading to cholesterol conversion into primary bile acids, whereas CYP3A is also involved in the detoxification of toxic secondary bile acid derivatives. Here, we show that PXR is a target for SHP. Using pull-down assays, we show that SHP interacts with both murine and human PXR in a ligand-dependent manner. From transient transfection assays, SHP is shown to be a potent repressor of PXR transactivation. Furthermore, we report that chenodeoxycholic acid and cholic acid, two farnesoid X receptor ligands, induce up-regulation of SHP and provoke a repression of PXR-mediated CYP3A induction in human hepatocytes as well as in vivo in mice. These results reveal an elaborate regulatory cascade, tightly controlled by SHP, for both the maintenance of bile acid production and detoxification in the liver.
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