A region in the steroid binding domain determines formation of the non-DNA-binding, 9 S glucocorticoid receptor complex.

William B. Pratt(Université Paris-Sud), Dominique Jolly(Université Paris-Sud), Diana Pratt(Université Paris-Sud), S M Hollenberg(Université Paris-Sud), Vincent Giguère(Université Paris-Sud), F. Cadepond(Université Paris-Sud), Ghislaine Schweizer-Groyer(Université Paris-Sud), M.G. Catelli(Université Paris-Sud), Ronald M. Evans(Université Paris-Sud), E.E. Baulieu(Université Paris-Sud)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
January 1, 1988
Cited by 268Open Access
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Abstract

This work was initiated to determine if a specific region of the glucocorticoid receptor determines the formation of the inactive (i.e. non-DNA-binding) 9 S form of the receptor recovered in cytosol preparations. It is known that the murine glucocorticoid receptor of the nti phenotype, which consists of only the carboxyl-terminal 40-kDa peptide containing the DNA-binding and steroid-binding domains separated by a short linker region, is recovered in hypotonic lysates as a 9 S heteromeric complex (Gehring, U., and Arndt, H. (1985) FEBS Lett. 179, 138-142). To further localize the domain required for formation of the 9 S complex, we have determined the sedimentation coefficients of receptors produced in COS-7 cells transfected with several mutants of the human glucocorticoid receptor gene. Deletion of the DNA-binding domain results in a 9 S complex that is somewhat less stable than the wild type receptor during sucrose gradient centrifugation. Deletion of the linker region yields a molybdate-stabilized 9 S complex, but deletion of the entire steroid-binding domain or internal deletion of the amino-terminal two-thirds of this domain yields receptors that are constitutive transcriptional activators and are present in cytosol only in the 4 S form. Taken together, these observations demonstrate that the steroid-binding domain contains the features required for formation of the 9 S heteromeric complex, and they are consistent with the proposal that the steroid-binding domain normally represses receptor function.


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