Abstract

NGFI-B, Nurr1 and NOR-1 constitute a distinct subfamily within the nuclear receptor superfamily. To clarify the transcriptional regulation by the NGFI-B family, we searched for other components that can bind to the NBRE response element, a known target sequence for these transcription factors. By low stringency hybridization using the DNA binding domain of NOR-1 as a probe, a C-terminal truncated Nurr1 isoform, named Nurr2, was isolated from a mouse MC3T3-E1 cell cDNA library. Nurr2 had a novel cryptic exon located upstream in the Nurr1 promoter region, and was generated by alternative splicing at exons 1, 2 and 6. The C-terminal region was encoded by frame-shifted exon 6, and so Nurr2 lacked the C-terminal sequences corresponding to the putative ligand binding domain or dimerization domain. Quantitative reverse transcriptase-PCR experiments confirmed the presence of the Nurr2 isoform in mouse, rat and human. It was, like Nurr1, highly expressed in the pituitary and the cerebral cortex. Nurr2 and Nurr1 were also concomitantly induced by forskolin in NIH3T3 cells. Functional analysis using a reporter gene, containing NBRE response elements, indicated that while the isoform was inactive by itself, it could inhibit transactivation by the members of the NGFI-B family. These results indicate that the C-terminal truncated isoform, Nurr2, may act as a negative regulator of the NGFI-B family signaling.

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