Interplay between estrogens, progestins, retinoic acid and AP-1 on a single regulatory site in the progesterone receptor gene.

Jean-Frangois Savouret,Michel Rauch,Gerard RedeuilhS,Sokhavuth Sar,A. Chauchereau,Kathryn Woodruff,M. G. Parker,Edwin Milgromn

Published 1994 in Journal of Biological Chemistry

ABSTRACT

Transcriptional regulation of the progesterone receptor gene involves induction by estrogens and down-regulation by progestins, retinoic acid, and AP-1 proteins. We have previously identified an intragenic (+698/+723) estrogen-responsive element present in the progesterone receptor gene, which binds the estradiol receptor and mediates estrogen and 4-OH tamoxifen induction. Progesterone receptor gene expression was equally stimulated by estradiol and 4-OH tamoxifen in the presence of a NH2 terminally deleted estrogen receptor mutant lacking activation function 1, suggesting that activation function 2 was the predominant activation domain. This was confirmed by the lack of activity of an estrogen receptor mutant deleted of activation function 2. Repression by progestins, retinoic acid, and AP-1 was mediated by the same estrogen responsive element although retinoic and progesterone receptors as well as AP-1 proteins did not bind to this element. Repression by these proteins appears to involve different transactivating regions of the estrogen receptor. Repression by retinoic receptors involved only activation function 2 whereas repression by progesterone receptor and AP-1 necessitated both functional domains. Since these proteins act without directly contacting the DNA, it seems likely that repression may be achieved by protein-protein interactions among different domains of the estrogen receptor and/or the transcriptional machinery.

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