Direct Acetylation of the Estrogen Receptor α Hinge Region by p300 Regulates Transactivation and Hormone Sensitivity

Chenguang Wang(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Maofu Fu(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Ruth Hogue Angeletti(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Linda Siconolfi-Baez(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Anne T. Reutens(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Chris Albanese(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Michael P. Lisanti(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Benita S. Katzenellenbogen(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Shigeaki Kato(The University of Tokyo), Torsten Hopp(Baylor College of Medicine), Suzanne A.W. Fuqua(Baylor College of Medicine), Gabriela N. Lopez(University of California, San Francisco), Peter J. Kushner(University of California, San Francisco), Richard G. Pestell(Albert Einstein College of Medicine)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
May 1, 2001
Cited by 351Open Access
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Abstract

Regulation of nuclear receptor gene expression involves dynamic and coordinated interactions with histone acetyl transferase (HAT) and deacetylase complexes. The estrogen receptor (ERalpha) contains two transactivation domains regulating ligand-independent and -dependent gene transcription (AF-1 and AF-2 (activation functions 1 and 2)). ERalpha-regulated gene expression involves interactions with cointegrators (e.g. p300/CBP, P/CAF) that have the capacity to modify core histone acetyl groups. Here we show that the ERalpha is acetylated in vivo. p300, but not P/CAF, selectively and directly acetylated the ERalpha at lysine residues within the ERalpha hinge/ligand binding domain. Substitution of these residues with charged or polar residues dramatically enhanced ERalpha hormone sensitivity without affecting induction by MAPK signaling, suggesting that direct ERalpha acetylation normally suppresses ligand sensitivity. These ERalpha lysine residues also regulated transcriptional activation by histone deacetylase inhibitors and p300. The conservation of the ERalpha acetylation motif in a phylogenetic subset of nuclear receptors suggests that direct acetylation of nuclear receptors may contribute to additional signaling pathways involved in metabolism and development.


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