Three amino acids of the oestrogen receptor are essential to its ability to distinguish an oestrogen from a glucocorticoid-responsive element
- 1 March 1989
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 338 (6212), 271-274
- https://doi.org/10.1038/338271a0
Abstract
Steroid hormone receptors activate specific gene transcription by binding as hormone-receptor complexes to DNA enhancer elements termed hormone responsive elements. A highly conserved 66-amino-acid region of the oestrogen and glucocorticoid receptors which corresponds to part of the receptor DNA-binding domain (region C) determines the specificity of target gene recognition. This region contains two subregions (CI and CII), encoded in two separate exons, that are analogous to the 'zinc fingers' of the transcription factor TFIIIA. The N-terminal CI finger determines the recognition specificity of the hormone responsive element. A chimaeric oestrogen receptor, in which the CI finger is replaced with the corresponding glucocorticoid receptor CI finger region, activates transcription from a reporter gene containing a glucocorticoid-responsive element, but not from a reporter gene containing an oestrogen-responsive element. We report here that three amino acids located at the C-terminal side of the oestrogen receptor CI finger play a key part in this specificity.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nuclear receptors enhance our understanding of transcription regulationTrends in Genetics, 1988
- Identification of a second human retinoic acid receptorNature, 1988
- Functional domains of the human estrogen receptorCell, 1987
- A human retinoic acid receptor which belongs to the family of nuclear receptorsNature, 1987
- Oestrogen and glucocorticoid responsive elements are closely related but distinctNature, 1987
- Complete amino acid sequence of the human progesterone receptor deduced from cloned cDNABiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1987
- Oestradiol induction of a glucocorticoid-responsive gene by a chimaeric receptorNature, 1987
- ‘Zinc fingers’: a novel protein motif for nucleic acid recognitionTrends in Biochemical Sciences, 1987
- An estrogen-responsive element derived from the 5′ flanking region of the Xenopus vitellogenin A2 gene functions in transfected human cellsCell, 1986
- Human oestrogen receptor cDNA: sequence, expression and homology to v-erb-ANature, 1986