A nuclear protein is required for thyroid hormone receptor binding to an inhibitory half-site in the epidermal growth factor receptor promoter

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Abstract

The epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (EGFR) promoter is negatively regulated by thyroid hormone and retinoic acid. This regulation can be mapped to a 36-basepair GC-rich region of the promoter (EGFR P/E) that functions autonomously as a promoter and an enhancer when placed in front of the thymidine kinase gene TATA element. Direct high affinity binding of the thyroid hormone receptor (T3R) to this element requires a nuclear protein. Through ion exchange chromatography and gel filtration of HeLa nuclear extract, this activity was identified as a protein of approximately 67 kilodaltons. This protein did not bind to DNA alone, but greatly augmented T3R binding to the EGFR P/E sequence in gel mobility shift and DNA precipitation assays. When combined with the T3R auxiliary protein (TRAP), the T3R migrated as a larger complex on the DNA. Chemical cross-linking identified this complex as a heterodimer between T3R and TRAP. T3R-TRAP binds to a 7-basepair site in the EGFR P/E (GGGACTC) that has weak homology to a consensus thyroid response element half-site. Thus, on this element, T3R-TRAP heterodimers contact the DNA primarily on a single site that comprises an inhibitory thyroid response element.

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Thompson, K. L., Santon, J. B., Shephard, L. B., Walton, G. M., & Gill, G. N. (1992). A nuclear protein is required for thyroid hormone receptor binding to an inhibitory half-site in the epidermal growth factor receptor promoter. Molecular Endocrinology, 6(4), 627–635. https://doi.org/10.1210/mend.6.4.1584225

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