Abstract

The orphan nuclear hormone receptor liver receptor homologous protein-1 (LRH-1; NR5A2, also known as FTF), an unusual receptor that binds DNA as a monomer, is an essential regulator of expression of a rate-limiting enzyme in bile acid formation, cholesterol 7-alpha-hydroxylase. In a classic negative feedback loop that is a crucial component of the complex regulation of cholesterol metabolism, cholesterol 7-alpha-hydroxylase expression is decreased when bile acid levels are high. This repression is thought to be based on the bile acid-dependent induction of expression of the orphan receptor small heterodimer partner (SHP) NR0B2, which inhibits the activity of LRH-1. We have explored the molecular basis for this important regulatory effect by characterizing the mechanisms by which mouse and human SHP inhibit LRH-1-mediated transactivation. Both SHP proteins specifically interact with the AF-2 transactivation domain of LRH-1 both in vivo and in vitro. This domain is a common target for coactivator interaction, and the SHP proteins can compete with p160 coactivators for binding to LRH-1. In addition to the N-terminal receptor interaction domain, SHP includes a C-terminal domain with autonomous repression function. Neither a deletion nor a point mutation specifically affecting this domain blocked the ability to interact with LRH-1 to compete for coactivator binding or to repress LRH-1 transactivation. However, the relative ability of these mutants to inhibit LRH-1-mediated transactivation was markedly decreased. We conclude that the proposed central role of SHP in cholesterol metabolism is based on a two-step mechanism that is dependent on both coactivator competition and direct transcriptional repression.

Highlights

  • The orphan receptor SHP1 lacks the highly conserved DNA binding present in other members of the nuclear hormone receptor superfamily [1]

  • (11), this SF-1 luciferase reporter was strongly transactivated by liver receptor homologous protein-1 (LRH-1) (Fig. 1A), and the coexpression of mouse small heterodimer partner (SHP) efficiently inhibited LRH-1-mediated transactivation in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 1A, bars 3–5)

  • This inhibition is not dependent on decreased DNA binding by LRH-1, because the addition of SHP did not affect the specific recognition of an SF-1/LRH-1 response element by LRH-1 in vitro as measured by the electrophoretic mobility shift assay

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Summary

Introduction

The orphan receptor SHP1 lacks the highly conserved DNA binding present in other members of the nuclear hormone receptor superfamily [1]. Neither a deletion nor a point mutation affecting this domain blocked the ability to interact with LRH-1 to compete for coactivator binding or to repress LRH-1 transactivation. Initial results with retinoic acid receptor-RXR heterodimers indicated that SHP can inhibit DNA binding in some cases [1].

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