Glucocorticoid receptor isoforms direct distinct mitochondrial programs to regulate ATP production

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Abstract

The glucocorticoid receptor (GR), a nuclear receptor and major drug target, has a highly conserved minor splice variant, GRγ, which differs by a single arginine within the DNA binding domain. GRγ, which comprises 10% of all GR transcripts, is constitutively expressed and tightly conserved through mammalian evolution, suggesting an important non-redundant role. However, to date no specific role for GRγ has been reported. We discovered significant differences in subcellular localisation, and nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling in response to ligand. In addition the GRγ transcriptome and protein interactome was distinct, and with a gene ontology signal for mitochondrial regulation which was confirmed using Seahorse technology. We propose that evolutionary conservation of the single additional arginine in GRγ is driven by a distinct, non-redundant functional profile, including regulation of mitochondrial function.

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Morgan, D. J., Poolman, T. M., Williamson, A. J. K., Wang, Z., Clark, N. R., Ma’ayan, A., … Ray, D. W. (2016). Glucocorticoid receptor isoforms direct distinct mitochondrial programs to regulate ATP production. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep26419

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