Abstract

BackgroundGlucocorticoid receptor (GR) is a hormone-activated, DNA-binding transcriptional regulatory factor that controls inflammation, metabolism, stress responses, and other physiological processes. In vitro, GR binds as an inverted dimer to a motif consisting of two imperfectly palindromic 6 bp half sites separated by 3 bp spacers. In vivo, GR employs different patterns of functional surfaces of GR to regulate different target genes. The relationships between GR genomic binding and functional surface utilization have not been defined.ResultsWe find that A477T, a GR mutant that disrupts the dimerization interface, differs from wild-type GRα in binding and regulation of target genes. Genomic regions strongly occupied by A477T are enriched for a novel half site motif. In vitro, GRα binds half sites as a monomer. Through the overlap between GRα- and A477T-bound regions, we identify GRα-bound regions containing only half sites. We further identify GR target genes linked with half sites and not with the full motif.ConclusionsGenomic regions bound by GR differ in underlying DNA sequence motifs and in the GR functional surfaces employed for regulation. Identification of GR binding regions that selectively utilize particular GR surfaces may discriminate sub-motifs, including the half site motif, that favor those surfaces. This approach may contribute to predictive models for GR activity and therapy.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13059-014-0418-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Glucocorticoid receptor (GR) is a hormone-activated, Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)-binding transcriptional regulatory factor that controls inflammation, metabolism, stress responses, and other physiological processes

  • Different GR alleles induce diverse, gene-specific transcriptional responses To improve our understanding of the patterns of GR functional surfaces used during transcriptional regulation, we carried out a genome-wide analysis in a series of human U2OS osteosarcoma cell lines with stably integrated GR alleles [2,6]

  • We found that A477T, a mutation in the dimerization interface of GR leading to reduced DNAbinding cooperativity and increased dissociation rates in vitro [4], resulted in gains and losses in glucocorticoidinduced gene regulation and in Glucocorticoid receptor binding region (GBR) occupancy in vivo

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Summary

Introduction

Glucocorticoid receptor (GR) is a hormone-activated, DNA-binding transcriptional regulatory factor that controls inflammation, metabolism, stress responses, and other physiological processes. GR employs different patterns of functional surfaces of GR to regulate different target genes. Glucocorticoid receptor (GR, HUGO symbol NR3C1) is a DNA-binding transcriptional regulatory factor that is activated by binding glucocorticoid hormones, and which regulates diverse aspects of physiology. In vitro, purified GR recognizes a GR binding sequence (GBS) motif composed of imperfect palindromic 6 base pair (bp) ‘half sites’ separated by 3 bp ‘spacers’, binding as an inverted dimer [5]. It is reassuring that GBS motifs drive GR-regulated transcription in a simple reporter context [5], and reasonable to assume that GR occupancy at GBRs that contain GBSs reflects in vivo sequence recognition. Rules dictating the relationship between DNA sequence, GR conformation, and utilization of distinct GR functional surfaces remain unknown

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