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Steroidogenic Factor-1 Contains a Carboxy-Terminal Transcriptional Activation Domain That Interacts with Steroid Receptor Coactivator-1
Author(s) -
Masafumi Ito,
Richard N. Yu,
J. Larry Jameson
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
molecular endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9917
pISSN - 0888-8809
DOI - 10.1210/mend.12.2.0059
Subject(s) - transactivation , steroidogenic factor 1 , biology , coactivator , zinc finger , fusion protein , transcription factor , nuclear receptor coactivator 2 , nuclear receptor coactivator 1 , dna binding domain , nuclear receptor , microbiology and biotechnology , binding domain , gene , binding site , genetics , recombinant dna
The orphan nuclear receptor, steroidogenic factor-1 (SF-1), plays an important role in the development of the adrenal gland and in sexual differentiation. SF-1 regulates the transcription of variety of genes, including several steroidogenic enzymes, Müllerian inhibiting substance, and gonadotropin genes. In this report, we sought to identify domains in SF-1 that are required for transactivation and to determine whether SF-1 interacts with a subset of known coactivators. Natural variants of the FTZ-F1 locus include embryonal long terminal repeat-binding protein (ELP)-1, ELP-2, and SF-1, which share the DNA-binding domain. Analyses of the transcriptional activity of these variants revealed that the activity of ELP-2 and SF-1 was much greater than ELP-1, which contains a distinct carboxy terminus. Further studies were performed using GAL4-SF-1 fusion proteins that were constructed by replacement of the zinc finger region and FTZ-F1 box of SF-1 with the DNA-binding domain of GAL4. Elimination of the putative AF-2 domain at the carboxy terminus of GAL4-SF-1 proteins resulted in a complete loss of transactivation. Several lines of evidence demonstrated that SF-1 interacts with steroid receptor coactivator-1 (SRC-1). Full-length SRC-1 enhanced GAL4-SF-1-mediated transactivation, whereas a dominant negative form of SRC-1, consisting of its interaction domain alone, inhibited the activity of GAL4-SF-1. In mammalian two-hybrid assays, fusion of the VP16 activation domain to the interaction domain of SRC-1 confirmed the interaction between SRC-1 and GAL4-SF-1 and demonstrated that the AF-2 domain is required for interaction with SRC-1. Furthermore, SRC-1, together with the cAMP responsive element binding protein (CBP) or a closely related factor, p300, synergistically enhanced transcriptional activity of GAL4-SF-1. We conclude that the carboxy-terminal AF-2 region of SF-1 functions as an activation domain and that SRC-1 and CBP/p300 are components of the coactivator complex with SF-1.

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