Molecular basis of estrogen-induced cyclooxygenase type 1 upregulation in endothelial cells

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Abstract

Estrogen upregulates cyclooxygenase-1 (COX-1) expression in endothelial cells. To determine the basis of this process, studies were performed in ovine endothelial cells transfected with the human COX-1 promoter fused to luciferase. Estradiol (E2) caused activation of the COX-1 promoter with maximal stimulation at 10-8 mol/L E2, and the response was mediated by either ERα or ERβ. Mutagenesis revealed a primary role for a putative Sp1 binding motif at -89 (relative to the ATG codon) and lesser involvement of a consensus Sp1 site at -111. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays yielded a single complex with the site at -89, and supershift analyses implicated AP-2α and ERα, and not Sp1, in protein-DNA complex formation. In endothelial cells with minimal endogenous ER, the transfection of ERα mutants lacking the DNA binding domain or primary nuclear localization signals caused 4-fold greater stimulation of promoter activity with E 2 than wild-type ERα. In contrast, mutant ERα lacking the A-B domains was inactive. Thus, estrogen-mediated upregulation of COX-1 in endothelium is uniquely independent of direct ERα-DNA binding and instead entails protein-DNA interaction involving AP-2α and ERα at a proximal regulatory element. In addition, the process may be initiated by cytoplasmic ERα, and critical receptor elements reside within the amino terminus. © 2005 American Heart Association, Inc.

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Gibson, L. L., Hahner, L., Osborne-Lawrence, S., German, Z., Wu, K. K., Chambliss, K. L., & Shaul, P. W. (2005). Molecular basis of estrogen-induced cyclooxygenase type 1 upregulation in endothelial cells. Circulation Research, 96(5), 518–525. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.0000158967.96231.88

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