Abstract

Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) show differential effects upon ERalpha activation function 1 (AF-1). Tamoxifen allows strong ERalpha AF-1 activity, whereas raloxifene allows less and ICI 182,780 (ICI) allows none. Here, we show that blockade of corepressor histone de-acetylase (HDAC) activity reverses the differential inhibitory effect of SERMs upon AF-1 activity in MCF-7 cells. This suggests that differential SERM repression of AF-1 involves HDAC-dependent corepressors. Consistent with this, ICI and raloxifene are more potent than tamoxifen in promoting ERalpha-dependent sequestration of progesterone receptor-associated corepressors. Moreover, ICI and raloxifene are more efficient than tamoxifen in promoting ERalpha binding to the corepressor N-CoR in vivo and in vitro. An ERalpha mutation (537X) that increases N-CoR binding in the presence of all SERMs blocks AF-1 activity. An ERalpha mutation (L379R) that decreases N-CoR binding increases AF-1 activity in the presence of ICI and raloxifene and reverses the effect of the 537X mutation. The 537X and L379R mutations also alter the ligand preference of ERalpha action at AP-1 sites and C3 complement, an action that also involves AF-1. Together, our results suggest that differential SERM effects on corepressor binding can explain differences in SERM effects on ERalpha activity. We propose a model for differential effects of SERMs on N-CoR binding.

Highlights

  • Estrogen signaling is mediated by two estrogen receptors (ER␣ and ER␤),1 which are conditional transcription factors [1,2,3]

  • TSA blocked the ability of SERMs to inhibit EREdependent transcription, with the result that fairly equivalent levels of estrogen response elements (EREs)-dependent transcription were obtained in the absence of hormone and in the presence of each ligand

  • The structural basis for these differential SERM effects on corepressor recruitment is unclear, and it is controversial whether ER␣ shows meaningful direct interactions with N-CoR

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Estrogen signaling is mediated by two estrogen receptors (ER␣ and ER␤), which are conditional transcription factors [1,2,3]. While SERMs act as antagonists in breast, they exhibit estrogen-like effects in other tissues. ER␣ AF-1 is strong in some cells [23,24,25], in the presence of high levels of AF-1 coactivators [26], in conditions of MAP and JNK kinase activation [27,28,29], and at certain promoters [23, 25, 30] In each of these cases, tamoxifen-liganded ER␣ exhibits activity that is equal to isolated AF-1, but raloxifene, GW5638-, and GW7604-liganded ER␣ show less activity [20, 31], and ICI-liganded ER␣ shows no activity at all [23].

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call