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GNL3L inhibits activity of estrogen-related receptor γ by competing for coactivator binding
Author(s) -
Hiroaki Yasumoto,
Lingjun Meng,
Tao Lin,
Qubo Zhu,
Robert Y. L. Tsai
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of cell science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.384
H-Index - 278
eISSN - 1477-9137
pISSN - 0021-9533
DOI - 10.1242/jcs.009878
Subject(s) - biology , coactivator , nuclear receptor coactivator 1 , nucleoplasm , microbiology and biotechnology , nuclear receptor coactivator 2 , transcription factor , reporter gene , genetics , gene , gene expression , nucleolus , cytoplasm
Guanine nucleotide binding protein-like 3 (GNL3L) is the closest homologue of a stem cell-enriched factor nucleostemin in vertebrates. They share the same yeast orthologue, Grn1p, but only GNL3L can rescue the growth-deficient phenotype in Grn1-null yeasts. To determine the unique function of GNL3L, we identified estrogen-related receptor gamma (ERRgamma) as a GNL3L-specific binding protein. GNL3L and ERRgamma are coexpressed in the eye, kidney and muscle, and co-reside in the nucleoplasm. The interaction between GNL3L and ERRgamma requires the intermediate domain of GNL3L and the AF2-domain of ERRgamma. Gain-of- and loss-of-function experiments show that GNL3L can inhibit the transcriptional activities of ERR genes in a cell-based reporter system, which does not require the nucleolar localization of GNL3L. We further demonstrate that GNL3L is able to reduce the steroid receptor coactivator (SRC) binding and the SRC-mediated transcriptional coactivation of ERRgamma. This work reveals a novel mechanism that negatively regulates the transcriptional function of ERRgamma by GNL3L through coactivator competition.

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