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1.
2.
While the effects of the ligand (hormone)_binding domain (LBD) on other receptor domain functions are kwown, the effects of other domains on LBD functions have not been studied. In this work, we examined the importance of the strutural integrity of other domains of the human glucocorticosteroid receptor (hGR) on LBD activity (stability of 8S complexes, binding of hormone, and transformation from the 8S to the 4S form). Several mutations introduced outside the LBD affect neither the formation of stable 8S heterooligomeric complexes nor the hGR binding affinity for the agonist triacinolone acetonide (TA) or the 8S-hGR into a 4S form. Deletion of the second zinc finger of the DNA binding domain (DBD) facilitated 8S dissociation whether the ligand was TA or RU486. Deletion of the first zinc finger facilitated dissociation only in the presence of RU486. Deletion of the first zinc finger facilitated dissociation only in the presence of RU486. while replacement of PRO 416 (in the N-terminal region of the DBD) by ARG destabilized the 8S form only in the presence of TA. Variations in the salt-sensitivity of the mutated 8S GR complexes as a function of the ligand suggest that the DBD may interact functioanlly (if not physically) with the LBD. This interaction (possibly mediated by hsp90) could be influenced by minor structural differences between agonist and antagonist-GR complexes.  相似文献   

3.
To identify the determinants of impaired glucocorticoid receptor (GR) signaling in a model of glucocorticoid resistance, cloned GR from Guyanese squirrel monkeys (gsmGR) was tagged with enhanced green fluorescent protein, and nuclear translocation was examined in transfected COS1 cells. In keeping with evidence that gsmGR transactivational competence is impaired, we found that nuclear translocation is likewise diminished in gsmGR relative to human GR (hGR). Experiments with GR chimeras revealed that replacement of the gsmGR ligand binding domain (LBD) with that from hGR increased translocation. Truncated gsmGR constructs lacking the LDB after amino acid 552 also showed increased translocation even in the absence of cortisol. Three back-mutations of gsmGR to hGR (Thr551Ser, Ala616Ser, and Ser618Ala) in the LBD confirmed that these amino acids play a role in diminished translocation.  相似文献   

4.
Nuclear localization of the rat glucocorticosteroid receptor (rGR) transiently expressed in COS-7 cells appears to be mediated by two nuclear localization signals, NL1 and NL2, in a hormone-dependent mechanism. We investigated the intracellular distribution of the human GR (hGR) expressed in COS-7 cells, by a different immunohistochemical technique involving immunostaining of cell pellet sections, thus avoiding the use of cell permeabilizing agents and allowing rigorous comparison between successive experiments. With a large set of hGR mutants, we could define determinants of the hGR nuclear localization and compare them with those previously reported for rGR. Our study demonstrated two hormone-dependent nuclear localization signals. NL1 activity, overlapping the DNA-binding domain (DBD)-hinge boundary, was repressed by the unliganded ligand-binding domain (LBD), even if the repressed NL1 retained a residual potency to target hGR in the nucleus. Structure/function analysis suggested a bipartite structure of NL1, analogous to that of other nuclear targeting signals (the carboxy-terminal part of DBD between amino acids 478 and 487 and the beginning of the hinge region which includes a basic amino acid stretch between 491 and 498). Upon hormone binding, NL2, located in the LBD, was activated, but was unable by itself to sustain full nuclear localization, which required the derepressed NL1 activity. Only two sequences in the LBD, localized between amino acids 600 and 626 and from amino acid 696 up to the carboxyl-terminal amino acid 777, respectively, were found to inhibit NL1 activity. As previously reported, efficient nuclear retention, mandatory for gene expression, did not required DNA-binding activity. The controversial intracellular localization of the unliganded form of hGR and the role of hsp90 in cytoplasmic localization are further discussed.  相似文献   

5.
In the absence of hormonal ligand, inactive, heterooligomeric, 8-10S steroid receptor complexes include a p59 protein (apparent M(r) approximately 59 kDa) bound to th heat shock protein hsp90 (apparent M(r) approximately 90 kDa), which itself binds to the ligand binding domain LBD of the receptor molecule, p59 is thus an hsp binding immunophilin HBI, which, through its interaction with a chaperone, may intervene in several cellular functions. We report that, in cell-free experiments at 0 degrees C, FK506 and rapamycin do not release p59 nor hsp90 from the 9.5S rabbit uterus progesterone receptor, suggesting that the binding of p59 to hsp90 does not interfere with the rotamase site of HBI. There is no "transformation/activation" of the receptor, but an up to 2 fold increase in progesterone agonist and antagonist binding to the receptor is observed. It is suggested that a functional interaction between HBI and receptor activity may be mediated by hsp90.  相似文献   

6.
It is known that inhibition of histone deacetylases (HDACs) leads to acetylation of the abundant protein chaperone hsp90. In a recent study, we have shown that knockdown of HDAC6 by a specific small interfering RNA leads to hyperacetylation of hsp90 and that the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), an established hsp90 "client" protein, is defective in ligand binding, nuclear translocation, and gene activation in HDAC6-deficient cells (Kovacs, J. J., Murphy, P. J. M., Gaillard, S., Zhao, X., Wu, J-T., Nicchitta, C. V., Yoshida, M., Toft, D. O., Pratt, W. B., and Yao, T-P. (2005) Mol. Cell 18, 601-607). Using human embryonic kidney wild-type and HDAC6 (small interfering RNA) knockdown cells transiently expressing the mouse GR, we show here that the intrinsic properties of the receptor protein itself are not affected by HDAC6 knockdown, but the knockdown cytosol has a markedly decreased ability to assemble stable GR.hsp90 heterocomplexes and generate stable steroid binding activity under cell-free conditions. HDAC6 knockdown cytosol has the same ability to carry out dynamic GR.hsp90 heterocomplex assembly as wild-type cytosol. Addition of purified hsp90 to HDAC6 knockdown cytosol restores stable GR.hsp90 heterocomplex assembly to the level of wild-type cytosol. hsp90 from HDAC6 knockdown cytosol has decreased ATP-binding affinity, and it does not assemble stable GR.hsp90 heterocomplexes when it is a component of a purified five-protein assembly system. Incubation of knockdown cell hsp90 with purified HDAC6 converts the hsp90 to wild-type behavior. Thus, acetylation of hsp90 results in dynamic GR.hsp90 heterocomplex assembly/disassembly, and this is manifest in the cell as a approximately 100-fold shift to the right in the steroid dose response for gene activation.  相似文献   

7.
In this work, we used two approaches to localize the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp90)-binding site within the hormone-binding domain of the glucocorticoid receptor. In the first approach, derivatives of the glucocorticoid receptor deleted for increasing portions of the COOH terminus were translated in rabbit reticulocyte lysate, and the [35S]methionine-labeled translation products were immunoadsorbed with the 8D3 monoclonal antibody against hsp90. The data suggest that a segment from amino acids 604 to 659 (mouse) of the receptor is required for hsp90 binding. We have recently shown that the internal deletion mutant of the mouse receptor (delta 574-632) binds hsp90, although the complex is somewhat unstable (Housley, P. R., Sanchez, E. R., Danielsen, M., Ringold, G. M., and Pratt, W. B. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 12778-12781). The two observations indicate that amino acids 574-659 are involved in forming a stable receptor-hsp90 complex and that region 632-659 is especially important. To test this hypothesis directly, we synthesized three peptides corresponding to segments in region 624-665 and three peptides spanning the highly conserved sequence at amino acids 582-617, and we then tested the ability of the peptides to compete for the association of hsp90 with the L cell glucocorticoid receptor. In this assay, the immunopurified hsp90-free mouse receptor is incubated with rabbit reticulocyte lysate, which directs the association of rabbit hsp90 with the mouse receptor, simultaneously converting the receptor to the steroid binding state. All three peptides spanning region 624-665 and a peptide corresponding to segment 587-606 inhibited both hsp90 association with the receptor and reconstitution of steroid binding capacity. The data from all of the approaches support a two-site model for the hsp90-binding site in which the critical contact site occurs in region 632-659, which contains a short proline-containing hydrophobic segment and adjacent dipole-plus-cysteine motif that are conserved among all of the hsp90-binding receptors in the superfamily. A second hsp90 contact site is predicted in region 574-632, which contains the only highly conserved amino acid sequence in the receptor superfamily outside of the DNA-binding domain.  相似文献   

8.
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A minimal system of five purified proteins, hsp90, hsp70, Hop, hsp40, and p23, assembles glucocorticoid receptor (GR).hsp90 heterocomplexes and causes the simultaneous opening of the steroid binding cleft to access by steroid. The first step in assembly is the ATP-dependent and hsp40 (YDJ-1)-dependent binding of hsp70 to the GR, which primes the receptor for subsequent ATP-dependent activation by hsp90, Hop, and p23 (Morishima, Y., Murphy, P. J. M., Li, D. P., Sanchez, E. R., and Pratt, W. B. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 18054-18060). Here we have examined the nucleotide-bound states of the two essential chaperones in each step. We show that it is the ATP-bound state of hsp70 that interacts initially with the GR. After rapid priming and washing, the primed GR.hsp70 complex rapidly binds hsp90 in the second step reaction in a nucleotide-independent manner. The rate-limiting step is the ATP-dependent opening of the steroid binding cleft after hsp90 binding. This activating step requires the N-terminal ATP-binding site of hsp90, but we cannot establish any role for a C-terminal ATP-binding site in steroid binding cleft opening. The reported specific inhibitors of the C-terminal ATP site on hsp90 inhibit the generation of steroid binding, but they have other effects in this multiprotein system that could explain the inhibition.  相似文献   

10.
Like other nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) enzymes, neuronal NOS (nNOS) turnover and activity are regulated by the ubiquitous protein chaperone hsp90. We have shown previously that nNOS expressed in Sf9 cells where endogenous heme levels are low is activated from the apo- to the holo-enzyme by addition of exogenous heme to the culture medium, and this activation is inhibited by radicicol, a specific inhibitor of hsp90 (Billecke, S. S., Bender, A. T., Kanelakis, K. C., Murphy, P. J. M., Lowe, E. R., Kamada, Y., Pratt, W. B., and Osawa, Y. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 15465-15468). In this work, we examine heme binding by apo-nNOS to form the active enzyme in a cell-free system. We show that cytosol from Sf9 cells facilitates heme-dependent apo-nNOS activation by promoting functional heme insertion into the enzyme. Sf9 cytosol also converts the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) to a state where the hydrophobic ligand binding cleft is open to access by steroid. Both cell-free heme activation of purified nNOS and activation of steroid binding activity of the immunopurified GR are inhibited by radicicol treatment of Sf9 cells prior to cytosol preparation, and addition of purified hsp90 to cytosol partially overcomes this inhibition. Although there is an hsp90-dependent machinery in Sf9 cytosol that facilitates heme binding by apo-nNOS, it is clearly different from the machinery that facilitates steroid binding by the GR. hsp90 regulation of apo-nNOS heme activation is very dynamic and requires higher concentrations of radicicol for its inhibition, whereas GR steroid binding is determined by assembly of stable GR.hsp90 heterocomplexes that are formed by a purified five-chaperone machinery that does not activate apo-nNOS.  相似文献   

11.
Rapid, ligand-dependent movement of glucocorticoid receptors (GR) from cytoplasm to the nucleus is hsp90-dependent, and much of the movement system has been defined. GR.hsp90 heterocomplexes isolated from cells contain one of several hsp90-binding immunophilins that link the complex to cytoplasmic dynein, a molecular motor that processes along microtubular tracks to the nucleus. The immunophilins link to dynein indirectly via the dynamitin component of the dynein-associated dynactin complex (Galigniana, M. D., Harrell, J. M., O'Hagen, H. M., Ljungman, M., and Pratt, W. B. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 22483-22489). Although it is known that rapid, hsp90-dependent GR movement requires intact microtubules, it has not been shown that the movement is dynein-dependent. Here, we show that overexpression of dynamitin, which blocks movement by dissociating the dynein motor from its cargo, inhibits ligand-dependent movement of the GR to the nucleus. We show that native GR.hsp90.immnunophilin complexes contain dynamitin as well as dynein and that GR heterocomplexes isolated from cytosol containing paclitaxel and GTP to stabilize microtubules also contain tubulin. The complete movement system, including the dynein motor complex and tubulin, can be assembled under cell-free conditions by incubating GR immune pellets with paclitaxel/GTP-stabilized cytosol prepared from GR(-) L cells. This is the first evidence that the movement of a steroid receptor is dynein-dependent, and it is the first isolation of a steroid receptor bound to the entire system that determines its retrograde movement.  相似文献   

12.
A system of five purified proteins that assembles stable glucocorticoid receptor (GR)-hsp90 heterocomplexes has been reconstituted from reticulocyte lysate. Two proteins, hsp90 and hsp70, are required for the activation of steroid binding activity that occurs with heterocomplex assembly, and three proteins, Hop, hsp40, p23, act as co-chaperones that enhance activation and assembly (Morishima, Y., Kanelakis, K. C., Silverstein, A.M., Dittmar, K. D., Estrada, L., and Pratt, W. B. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 6894-6900). Here we demonstrate that the first step in assembly is the ATP-dependent and hsp40 (YDJ-1)-dependent binding of hsp70 to the GR. After elimination of free hsp70, these preformed GR.hsp70 complexes can be activated to the steroid binding state by the hsp70 free assembly system in a second ATP-dependent step. hsp90 is required for opening of the steroid binding pocket and is converted to its ATP-dependent conformation during this second step. We predict that hsp70 in its ATP-dependent conformation binds initially to the folded receptor and is then converted to the ADP-dependent form with high affinity for hydrophobic substrate. This conversion initiates the opening of the hydrophobic steroid binding pocket such that it can now accept the hydrophobic binding form of hsp90, which in turn must be converted to its ATP-dependent conformation for the pocket to be accessible by steroid.  相似文献   

13.
We have recently reported that the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) becomes bound to the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp90) at or near the end of receptor translation in vitro (Dalman, F. C., Bresnick, E. H., Patel, P. D., Perdew, G. H., Watson, S. J., Jr., and Pratt, W. B. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 19815-19821). In this paper we compare the hsp90 binding and DNA binding activities of the thyroid hormone receptor (TR) to those of the GR after cell-free translation of the two receptors in rabbit reticulocyte lysate. In contrast to the newly translated GR, which is bound to hsp90 and must be transformed to the DNA binding state, the TR is not bound to hsp90 and is translated in its DNA binding form without any requirement for transformation. When the GR is translated in wheat germ extract, which does not contain hsp90, it is translated in its DNA binding form in the same manner as the TR synthesized in reticulocyte lysate. These observations provide direct evidence that binding of GR to hsp90 is associated with repression of its DNA binding function. The fact that the TR does not bind to hsp90 and is translated in its DNA binding form is consistent with the different behavior of this receptor with respect to classic steroid receptors in the intact cell. We propose that binding to hsp90 may account for the fact that most of the steroid receptors are recovered in the cytosolic fraction after lysis of hormone-free cells in low salt buffer whereas the hormone-free TR is recovered in tight association with the nucleus.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Reticulocyte lysate contains a chaperone system that assembles glucocorticoid receptor (GR).hsp90 heterocomplexes. Using purified proteins, we have prepared a five-protein heterocomplex assembly system consisting of two proteins essential for heterocomplex assembly-hsp90 and hsp70-and three proteins that act as co-chaperones to enhance assembly-Hop, hsp40, p23 [Morishima, Y., Kanelakis, K. C., Silverstein, A. M., Dittmar, K. D., Estrada, L., and Pratt, W. B. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 6894-6900]. The hsp70 co-chaperone Hip has been recovered in receptor.hsp90 heterocomplexes at an intermediate stage of assembly in reticulocyte lysate, and Hip is also thought to be an intrinsic component of the assembly machinery. Here we show that immunodepletion of Hip from reticulocyte lysate or addition of high levels of Hip to the purified five-protein system does not affect GR.hsp90 heterocomplex assembly or the activation of steroid binding activity that occurs with assembly. Despite the fact that Hip does not affect assembly, it is recovered in GR.hsp90 heterocomplexes assembled by both systems. In the five-protein system, Hip prevents inhibition of assembly by the hsp70 co-chaperone BAG-1, and cotransfection of Hip with BAG-1 opposes BAG-1 reduction of steroid binding activity in COS cells. We conclude that Hip is not a component of the assembly machinery but that it could play a regulatory role in opposition to BAG-1.  相似文献   

16.
17.
hsp90 and hsp70 are essential components of a five-protein system, including also the nonessential cochaperones Hop, hsp40, and p23, that assembles glucocorticoid receptor (GR).hsp90 heterocomplexes and causes the simultaneous opening of the steroid binding pocket to access by steroid. The first event in assembly is the ATP-dependent and hsp40 (YDJ-1)-dependent binding of hsp70 to the GR, which primes the receptor for subsequent ATP-dependent activation by hsp90 [Morishima, Y., Murphy, P. J. M., Li, D. P., Sanchez, E. R., and Pratt, W. B. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 18054-18060]. Here, we demonstrate that, during the priming step, ATP-bound hsp70 is converted to GR-bound hsp70 that is approximately 1/3 in the ADP- and approximately 2/3 in the ATP-dependent conformation. In the second step, hsp90, which is provided in the non-nucleotide-bound state, is converted to GR-bound hsp90 in the ATP-dependent conformation. The ATPase activity of hsp70 is K(+)-dependent, and the priming step is K(+)-dependent. Surprisingly, the subsequent hsp90-dependent step, which is rate-limiting for receptor activation, is also potassium-dependent. This suggests that GR-bound hsp70 is also converted from the ATP-dependent to the ADP-dependent conformation while it cooperates with hsp90 to activate steroid binding activity. Because the priming step requires both sustained high levels of ATP and YDJ-1 for optimal activity and because both steps require potassium, we predict that receptor-bound hsp70 undergoes iterative ratcheting between its ATP- and ADP-dependent conformations in opening the hydrophobic steroid binding pocket.  相似文献   

18.
We have previously shown that immunoadsorption of the FKBP52 immunophilin component of steroid receptor.hsp90 heterocomplexes is accompanied by coadsorption of cytoplasmic dynein, a motor protein involved in retrograde transport of vesicles toward the nucleus. Coimmunoadsorption of dynein is competed by an expressed fragment of FKBP52 comprising its peptidylprolyl isomerase (PPIase) domain (Silverstein, A. M., Galigniana, M. D., Kanelakis, K. C., Radanyi, C., Renoir, J.-M., and Pratt, W. B. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 52, 36980-36986). Here we show that cotransfection of 3T3 cells with the FKBP52 PPIase domain and a green fluorescent protein (GFP) glucocorticoid receptor (GR) chimera inhibits dexamethasone-dependent movement of the GFP-GR from the cytoplasm to the nucleus. Cotransfection with FKBP12 does not affect GFP-GR movement. Inhibition of movement by the FKBP52 PPIase domain is abrogated in cells treated with colcemid to eliminate microtubules prior to steroid addition. After withdrawal of colcemid, microtubules reform, and PPIase inhibition of GFP-GR movement is restored. These observations are consistent with the notion that FKBP52 targets retrograde movement of the GFP-GR along microtubules by linking the receptor to the dynein motor. Here, we also show that native GR.hsp90 heterocomplexes immunoadsorbed from L cell cytosol contain dynein and that GR.hsp90 heterocomplexes assembled in reticulocyte lysate contain cytoplasmic dynein in a manner that is competed by the PPIase domain of FKBP52.  相似文献   

19.
20.
We have recently reported that, in contrast to the glucocorticoid receptor, the thyroid hormone receptor does not bind to hsp90 when the receptor is translated in rabbit reticulocyte lysate [Dalman, F. C., Koenig, R. J., Perdew, G. H., Massa, E., & Pratt, W. B. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 3615-3618]. All of the steroid receptors that are known to bind hsp90 are recovered in the cytosolic fraction when hormone-free cells are ruptured in hypotonic buffer. In contrast, unliganded thyroid hormone receptors and retinoic acid receptors are tightly associated with nuclear components. In this paper, we translated the human estrogen receptor and the human retinoic acid receptor in reticulocyte lysate and then immunoadsorbed the [35S]methionine-labeled translation products with the 8D3 monoclonal antibody against hsp90. The estrogen receptor is bound to hsp90, as indicated by coimmunoadsorption, but the retinoic acid receptor is not. Translation and immunoadsorption of chimeric proteins containing the DNA binding domain of one receptor and the N-terminal and COOH-terminal segments of the other show that the DNA binding finger region of the estrogen receptor is neither necessary nor sufficient for hsp90 binding. These observations suggest that there are two classes within the steroid receptor family. In one class (e.g., glucocorticoid, mineralocorticoid, sex hormone, and dioxin receptors), the receptors bind to hsp90 and remain in some kind of inactive "docking" mode until hormone-triggered release of hsp90 occurs. In the retinoic acid/thyroid hormone class, the unligated receptors do not bind to hsp90, and the receptors appear to proceed directly to their high-affinity nuclear acceptor sites without entering the "docking" state.  相似文献   

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