Abstract

We characterized the cross-talk between activators of protein kinase A (PKA) and thyroid hormone (T3) in T3 receptor (TR)-mediated transcription. U937 cells were cotransfected with a plasmid expressing the TR and a reporter plasmid containing a T3 response element (TRE) oriented either as a direct repeat or as a palindrome upstream of the thymidine kinase promoter linked to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene. T3 activated transcription by 10-fold. T3 response was potentiated 2.5-3-fold by activators of PKA, but an activator of protein kinase C or of guanylate kinase was ineffective. In the absence of T3, activators of PKA had no effect on transcription. TR heterodimerization with the retinoid X receptor may facilitate T3/PKA cross-talk because coexpression of the retinoid X receptor potentiated cross-talk. Synergy was not observed in JEG-3, F9, CV-1, HeLa, L929, and HTC cells, indicating that it may require cell-specific factors. Synergy required the DNA- and ligand-binding domains, but not the amino-terminal domain, indicating that T3- and TRE-induced conformational changes on the TR are essential for cross-talk. PKA phosphorylated the TR in vitro, suggesting that, like other nuclear receptors, the TR is a target for PKA. These results imply that PKA cross-talks with T3 at the level of the TRE-bound TR, enhancing its transcriptional activity in a cell-specific manner.

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