Abstract

We describe the cloning, characterization, and tissue distribution of the two human peroxisome proliferator activated receptor isoforms hPPARgamma2 and hPPARgamma1. In cotransfection assays the two isoforms were activated to approximately the same extent by known PPARgamma activators. Human PPARgamma binds to DNA as a heterodimer with the retinoid X receptor (RXR). This heterodimer was activated by both RXR agonists and antagonists and the addition of PPARgamma ligands with retinoids resulted in greater than additive activation. Such heterodimer-selective modulators may have a role in the treatment of PPARgamma/RXR-modulated diseases like diabetes. Northern blot analysis indicated the presence of PPARgamma in skeletal muscle, and a sensitive RNase protection assay confirmed the presence of only PPARgamma1 in muscle that was not solely due to fat contamination. However, both PPARgamma1 and PPARgamma2 RNA were detected in fat, and the ratio of PPARgamma1 to PPARgamma2 RNA varied in different individuals. The presence of tissue-specific distribution of isoforms and the variable ratio of PPARgamma1 to PPARgamma2 raised the possibility that isoform expression may be modulated in disease states like non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Interestingly, a third protected band was detected with fat RNA indicating the possible existence of a third human PPARgamma isoform.

Highlights

  • Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs)1 are members of the intracellular receptor superfamily

  • The identification of human PPAR␥ isoforms and their tissue distribution will help in understanding their role in metabolic diseases like non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and obesity

  • We have cloned the cDNA for a second isoform of the human PPAR␥, hPPAR␥2

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Summary

Introduction

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs)1 are members of the intracellular receptor superfamily. Both BRL 49653 and LG100268 transcriptionally activated the PPAR␥2/RXR heterodimer (Fig. 5A), and the transcriptional response observed with both ligands was greater than that observed individually. This dimer-selective activity is probably not due to LG100754 binding with high affinity to PPAR␥ since LG100754 displaces labeled BRL 49653 from PPAR␥ only at very high concentrations in a DNA-dependent ligand binding assay using PPAR␥/RXR heterodimers [40] (data not shown).

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