Abstract
The human estrogen receptor (ER) is a ligand-inducible transcription factor that contains two transcriptional activation functions, one located in the NH2-terminal region of the protein (AF-1) and the second in the COOH-terminal region (AF-2). Antiestrogens, such as trans-hydroxytamoxifen (TOT), have partial agonistic activity in certain cell types, and studies have implied that this agonism is AF-1-dependent. We have made progressive NH2-terminal and other segment deletions and ligations in the A/B domain, and studied the transcriptional activity of these mutant ERs in ER-negative MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer and HEC-1 human endometrial cancer cells. Using several estrogens and several partial agonist/antagonist antiestrogens, we find that estrogens and antiestrogens require different regions of AF-1 for transcriptional activation. Deletion of the first 40 amino acids has no effect on receptor activity. Antiestrogen agonism is lost upon deletion to amino acid 87, while estrogen agonism is not lost until deletions progress to amino acid 109. Antiestrogen agonism has been further defined to require amino acids 41-64, as deletion of only these amino acids results in an ER that exhibits 100% activity with E2, but no longer shows an agonist response to TOT. With A/B-modified receptors in which antiestrogens lose their agonistic activity, the antiestrogens then function as pure estrogen antagonists. Our studies show that in these cellular contexts, hormone-dependent transcription utilizes a range of the amino acid sequence within the A/B domain. Furthermore, the agonist/antagonist balance and activity of antiestrogens such as TOT are determined by specific sequences within the A/B domain and thus may be influenced by differences in levels of specific factors that interact with these regions of the ER.
Highlights
Transactivation of estrogen-responsive genes by estrogen receptor (ER) can be antagonized by antiestrogens such as trans-hydroxytamoxifen (TOT) and ICI 164,384 [18, 19]
Different Regions in the A/B Domain Are Important for Estradiol- and trans-Hydroxytamoxifen-dependent Transcriptional Activity—Our studies were aimed at identifying regions within the A/B domain that are responsible for E2-dependent transcription and for antiestrogen agonism
The human estrogen receptor contains two transcriptional activation functions, AF-1 located in the A/B domain and AF-2 in the hormone-binding domain
Summary
Transactivation of estrogen-responsive genes by ER can be antagonized by antiestrogens such as trans-hydroxytamoxifen (TOT) and ICI 164,384 [18, 19]. Antiestrogen-occupied ER binds estrogen response DNA elements in cells [23, 24], it is thought that antiestrogens promote a conformational change which is different from that induced by E2 [24, 25]. We demonstrate that a specific 24-amino acid region of AF-1 of the human ER is necessary for agonism by TOT and other partial agonist/antagonist antiestrogens, but is not required for E2-dependent transactivation. Our studies show that in the context of the full-length ER, hormone-dependent transcription utilizes a broad range of sequences within the A/B domain and suggest that differences in the agonist/antagonist character of antiestrogens observed in different cells could be due to altered levels of specific factors that interact with these regions
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