Identical N-terminal deletions in the wild-type rat androgen receptor (rAR) and a constitutively active rAR (ARΔ641-902) devoid of the ligand- binding domain (LBD) resulted in dissimilar consequences in transcriptional activation: deletion of residues 149-295 abolished wild-type AR activity, but did not influence that of ARΔ641-902. The activity of the N-terminal transactivation domain is thus controlled by the hormone-occupied LBD, suggesting that the N- and C-terminal regions of rAR communicate. Consistent with this idea, a strong and androgen-dependent interaction between the N- terminal region and LBD was demonstrated in a mammalian two-hybrid system using GAL4 and VP16 fusion proteins. This interaction can be direct or indirect. Several nuclear receptor coactivators (CBP, F-SRC-1, SRC-1, and RIP140) that interact with other steroid receptors were tested as potential mediators of the N- and C-terminal interaction of rAR using the mammalian two-hybrid system. CBP or F-SRC-1 not only enhanced AR-mediated transactivation, but also facilitated the androgen-dependent interaction between the N- and C-terminal domains, implying that part of the coactivator- dependent transcriptional activation occurs via this mechanism. In contrast, SRC-1, a coactivator for the progesterone receptor, inhibited both AR- mediated transactivation and interaction between the N and C termini. Recruitment of coregulators may involve AR domains other than the LBD, as F- SRC-1 and CBP enhanced, but SRC-1 repressed, the transcriptional activity of ARΔ641-902. Collectively, interplay between the N-terminal region and LBD or rAR results in the formation of a transactivation complex that includes coregulators and that is a mandatory for optimal activation of androgen- induced promoters.
CITATION STYLE
Ikonen, T., Palvimo, J. J., & Jänne, O. A. (1997). Interaction between the amino- and carboxyl-terminal regions of the rat androgen receptor modulates transcriptional activity and is influenced by nuclear receptor coactivators. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 272(47), 29821–29828. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.47.29821
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.