Abstract
The thyroid hormone receptor (TR) and liver X receptor (LXR)-α are members of the nuclear hormone receptor family and are ligand-dependent transcription factors. Among the promoter target genes, TR and LXR recognize the T3 response element and LXR response element (LXRE), respectively. Because T3 response elements and LXREs have similar configurations, referred to as direct repeat 4, we investigated the possibility of cross-talk between the two ligand-dependent signal transduction pathways. We found that TRβ1, a major isoform of TR in the liver, binds and transactivates LXREs derived from the mouse mammary tumor virus long-terminal repeat and the promoter of the sterol regulatory element binding protein 1c. Moreover, unliganded TRβ1 suppresses promoter activity driven by LXRα and its ligand, whereas transactivation by T3-bound TRβ1 is not affected by LXRα in the presence or absence of oxysterols. Gel shift, mammalian two-hybrid, and glutathione S-transferase pull-down assays demonstrated the direct binding of TRβ1 to these LXREs and revealed that the interaction between TRβ1 and corepressors is important to the unliganded TR-mediated suppression of LXRα-transactivation. Our findings suggest that T 3 and TR influence lipid metabolism regulated by oxysterol/LXRα at the transcriptional level.
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CITATION STYLE
Kawai, K., Sasaki, S., Morita, H., Ito, T., Suzuki, S., Misawa, H., & Nakamura, H. (2004). Unliganded thyroid hormone receptor-β1 represses liver X receptor α/oxysterol-dependent transactivation. Endocrinology, 145(12), 5515–5524. https://doi.org/10.1210/en.2004-0382
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