The dominant negative effect of thyroid hormone receptor splicing variant alpha 2 does not require binding to a thyroid response element.
Author(s) -
RueTsuan Liu,
Shinichi Suzuki,
Takahide Miyamoto,
Teiji Takeda,
Metin Özata,
Leslie J. DeGroot
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
molecular endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9917
pISSN - 0888-8809
DOI - 10.1210/mend.9.1.7760853
Subject(s) - transactivation , biology , hormone response element , microbiology and biotechnology , rna splicing , thyroid hormone receptor alpha , thyroid hormone receptor , mutant , reporter gene , thyroid hormone receptor beta , alpha (finance) , receptor , transcription factor , gene , nuclear receptor , gene expression , biochemistry , hormone receptor , rna , genetics , medicine , construct validity , nursing , cancer , estrogen receptor , breast cancer , patient satisfaction
The functionally inactive thyroid hormone receptor splicing variant-alpha 2 (TRv alpha 2) can inhibit transcriptional activation by TR alpha 1 or beta 1, demonstrating a dominant negative effect (DNE). We examine here the three commonly proposed mechanisms, namely, competition for binding to thyroid hormone response elements (TREs), formation of inactive heterodimers, and squelching. A mutation introduced into the DNA-binding domain (DBD) of the TRv alpha 2 was designed to prevent its binding to TREs. In transient cotransfection studies, the DBD mutant has nearly the same DNE as does TRv alpha 2 on three different TRE-containing reporter genes. The DNE of TRv alpha 2 is also not reversed by cotransfection with excess retinoid X receptor-alpha. Extracts of COS cells cotransfected with TR alpha 1 and either TRv alpha 2 or DBD mutant at different ratios were analyzed by gel shift assays. Neither TRv alpha 2 or the mutant altered binding of TR alpha 1 to four radiolabeled TREs. TRv alpha 2 itself can inhibit constitutive transactivation by a thymidine kinase promoter-driven reporter construct. Our results suggest that TRv alpha 2 can function in a dominant negative manner without binding to a TRE, at least for certain TREs. It is concluded that the DNE of TRv alpha 2 may occur through another unrecognized mechanism, perhaps by binding to basal transcription factors.
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