An additional region of coactivator GRIP1 required for interaction with the hormone-binding domains of a subset of nuclear receptors

74Citations
Citations of this article
17Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Transcriptional coactivators of the p160 family (SRC-1, GRIP1, and p/CIP) associate with DNA-bound nuclear receptors (NRs) and help the NRs to recruit an active transcription initiation complex to the promoters of target genes. Previous studies have demonstrated the importance of the NR interaction domain (NID) of p160 proteins containing three NR box motifs (LXXLL) for the interaction with the hormone-binding domains of NRs. Here we report that, in addition to NID, another region of coactivator GRIP1 (amino acids 1011-1121), called the auxiliary NID (NIDaux), is required in vitro and in vivo for efficient interaction with a subset of NRs, including the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), androgen receptor, and retinoic acid receptor α. A second group of NRs, which includes the progesterone receptor, retinoid X receptor α, thyroid hormone receptor β1, and vitamin D receptor, required only NID for efficient interaction. For binding to GR, the NID and NIDaux of GRIP1 must act in cis, but deletion of up to 144 amino acids between the two regions did not reduce binding efficiency. Amino acids 1011-1121 of GRIP1 also contain a p300 interaction domain, but mutational analysis indicated that the p300 interaction function within this region is separable from the ability to contribute to GR hormone-binding domain binding. SRC-1 lacks an NIDaux activity equivalent to that in GRIP1.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Hong, H., Darimont, B. D., Ma, H., Yang, L., Yamamoto, K. R., & Stallcup, M. R. (1999). An additional region of coactivator GRIP1 required for interaction with the hormone-binding domains of a subset of nuclear receptors. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 274(6), 3496–3502. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.274.6.3496

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free