Hormone response element binding proteins: Novel regulators of vitamin D and estrogen signaling

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Abstract

Insights from vitamin D-resistant New World primates and their human homologues as models of natural and pathological insensitivity to sterol/steroid action have uncovered a family of novel intracellular vitamin D and estrogen regulatory proteins involved in hormone action. The proteins, known as "vitamin D or estrogen response element-binding proteins", behave as potent cis-acting, transdominant regulators to inhibit steroid receptor binding to DNA response elements and is responsible for vitamin D and estrogen resistances. This set of interactors belongs to the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) family of previously known pre-mRNA-interacting proteins. This review provides new insights into the mechanism by which these novel regulators of signaling and metabolism can act to regulate responses to vitamin D and estrogen. In addition the review also describes other molecules that are known to influence nuclear receptor signaling through interaction with hormone response elements. © 2011 Elsevier Inc.

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Lisse, T. S., Hewison, M., & Adams, J. S. (2011, March). Hormone response element binding proteins: Novel regulators of vitamin D and estrogen signaling. Steroids. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.steroids.2011.01.002

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